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5-6 Burnside industrial Estate, Turnpike Close, Grantham, NG31 7XU, England
Description
Following in the footsteps of thousands of women who have brewed through the millennia, Sara Barton founded Brewster’s Brewing Company and the first beers flowed in 1998.
Over eons and through civilisations, women had brewed beer as naturally as they baked and nurtured their families. In recent centuries though, a woman’s role within the brewing craft had changed. Old fashioned societal norms and industrialisation had turned women away from being the natural brewers of beer. In modern times things have been changing and thankfully the world is different now; the new age of the Brewster is dawning.
After equipping herself with a Masters degree in Brewing and Distilling from Heriot Watt in 1989, Sara was to join the tiny band of female pioneers working in the brewing world and then in time she took the step to lead her own brewing company.
Sara took the name Brewsters for the brewery as it was an old English word for a female brewer. In the mid nineteen nineties when Brewster’s brewery was started it was a term seldom used or even understood.
Brewster’s brewery is now a 32 hectolitre (or 20bbl if you are old school) single infusion brewhouse located in Grantham, Lincolnshire. Cask conditioned ales predominate but brewery conditioning is developing to be an important element for the brewery and allows other beer styles such as kegged beers and canned small pack to develop. The small batch size gives scope for great variety in styles.
Over eons and through civilisations, women had brewed beer as naturally as they baked and nurtured their families. In recent centuries though, a woman’s role within the brewing craft had changed. Old fashioned societal norms and industrialisation had turned women away from being the natural brewers of beer. In modern times things have been changing and thankfully the world is different now; the new age of the Brewster is dawning.
After equipping herself with a Masters degree in Brewing and Distilling from Heriot Watt in 1989, Sara was to join the tiny band of female pioneers working in the brewing world and then in time she took the step to lead her own brewing company.
Sara took the name Brewsters for the brewery as it was an old English word for a female brewer. In the mid nineteen nineties when Brewster’s brewery was started it was a term seldom used or even understood.
Brewster’s brewery is now a 32 hectolitre (or 20bbl if you are old school) single infusion brewhouse located in Grantham, Lincolnshire. Cask conditioned ales predominate but brewery conditioning is developing to be an important element for the brewery and allows other beer styles such as kegged beers and canned small pack to develop. The small batch size gives scope for great variety in styles.
7/10
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Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7
Cask at the moon under water Watford Jdw. A clear golden coloured pour with a lasting fine white head. Aroma is nice base grains,, gooseberry, lemongrass, straw, straw. Flavour is composed of semi sweet, Base malts, more gooseberry, lime, hedgerow hop, grass, palate is semi sweet, semi crisp, decent cask condition. Solid hoppy golden
Tried
from Cask
on 07 Sep 2024
at 13:20
6.6/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 7
Texture 6
Overall 7.5
Hand-pulled pint in the Telford Town Centre Wetherspoons on 6th September 2024. Clear and clean light golden body, white crown. Easy blend of pale malts and slightly bittering hops, a mild citrus leaning also. Nothing unusual or different, just a nice pint of beer.
Tried
on 06 Sep 2024
at 10:29
7.2/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7
Cask at Bull & Stirrup, Chester. Pours pale straw with a medium sized, foamy almost white head and good lacing. There’s malts and tropical fruits in the aroma. In the mouth it is sweet and zesty with floral hops and grapefruit to the fore. Hints of kiwi and mango too. Later on some underlying caramel can be detected, and there are traces of citrus leading to a bittersweet finish. This is quite decent – nice and refreshing.
Tried
from Cask
on 24 Aug 2024
at 19:36
7.2/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7
Can at the Foot of the Walk. Pours clear golden amber with a thick white head. Aromas of citrus, pine and faint caramel. Taste adds some brown bread. Light bitter finish. OK.
Tried
from Can
on 25 Jul 2024
at 15:53
6.2/10
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Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 7
Cask at BeerHeadZ, Lincoln. Pale golden colour with a white head. Aroma and taste are light fruity and sweet, light thin body.
Tried
from Cask
on 18 May 2024
at 11:50
5.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 4
Overall 5.5
12/4/2024. Cask at the 11th Isle of Man Beer & Cider Festival. Pours clear pale gold with a small frothy white head. Aroma is grassy, hoppy, citrus, sour pineapple, biscuit, malt. Moderate sweetness and bitterness with light sourness. Moderate body, watery, soft carbonation. Drying finish. Not a fan.
Tried
from Cask
on 12 Apr 2024
at 14:37
6/10
Tried
on 11 Feb 2024
at 17:26
7/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 8
Overall 7
Cask-conditioned at the Commercial Rooms (JDW), Bristol October 2023. Golden in colour, with a slight, white, head. Citrus hops, some tangerine and pineapple fruit character, white bread malts leading to a dryish finish. Enjoyable.
Tried
from Cask
on 03 Feb 2024
at 14:38
7.4/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 8
Texture 8
Overall 7.5
Cask at Picture House, Stafford. Pours “bitter brown” with a medium sized almost white head and good lacing. There’s a slightly sweet aroma with oranges to the fore. In the mouth it starts off sweet with oranges the main flavour, but gradually becomes more and more bitter with floral hops, autumn fruits, some underlying malts and traces of nuts. Finish is dry and slightly sticky. This is decent – a good old fashioned bitter – or should that be “best bitter” ?
Tried
from Cask
on 17 Jan 2024
at 22:25
7.2/10
Slightly spicy porter, nice light malt notes up front. Some bitter coffee, clean
Tried
from Can
on 02 Jan 2024
at 22:33