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BOB'S BREWING COMPANY LTD

73 Dewsbury Road, Ossett, WF5 9QN

Registered No. 04701605

trading as RED LION ALES Phone 07789 693597

Where can you get Bob's Ales locally?

The Red Lion at Ossett currently has White Lion and  another Bob's beer when available. Bob's  beers are regularly available at the Brewers Pride, Healey, Ossett. The Hawne Tavern at Halesowen is a regular outpost for Bob's beers in the West Midlands.

Wakefield's Red Shed often has a Bob's beer among its ever changing selection.

The logo illustrated is the original - a BOB'S logo will be added if Bob should decide to change.

SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL - MARCH 2006, BOB DECIDES TO KEEP THE BREWERY AT THE RED LION SITE

Bob's Brewing Company, still known to many as the Red Lion Brewery is going to stay behind the Red Lion pub at 73 Dewsbury Road, between Flushdyke and Streetside, on the outskirts of Ossett. 

How it began: The pub had been extending its guest beer range, and a logical next step was to bring in Bob Hunter (pictured below), formerly of Ossett Brewing, to set up and run a 4-5 barrel length plant, brewing once a week, mainly for the pub itself. Originally annual barrrelage was about 300. The mash tun had to be trundled out of the way when not in use: Bob had originally planned to make it hoistable to loft level, but it was not practicable. Trying to shoe-horn the equipment into such a small space Bob's pipework  had to be spot-on, and he was not short of bruises on the knees & elbows. An adequate power supply  had to be installed in the outbuilding. The only major hitch was that one of Bob's second-hand vessels leaked like a sieve when it was tested and a replacement had to be hastily found. Two conditioning tanks have been squeezed into the space, but Bob says you can't slide a cigarette paper between them. There's almost nowhere to store full casks so it's a real "just-in-time" delivery situation. 

The official launch took place at the Red Lion on Tuesday 9th April 2002, and the beers were also on sale at O'Donoghues in the City and occasionally in The Plough at Warmfield. Contact telephone number 07789 693597. Bob insisted on passing the Beer Duty reduction on to his customers, enabling his beers to be sold at £1.69 for a 4.3% and £1.76 for a 4.5 or 5.2.(2003 prices)

The Beer Range:The yeast Bob was originally using came from the Stones plant at Tadcaster but it proved to be too slow-working with Bob's smaller quantities (up to 9 days). He then turned to a yeast from Old Mill at Snaith and this was much more at home in his small vessels, being first used for Bob's Special Bitter, a satisfying pale brown 4.2% old-fashioned "beery" bitter with a lingering hoppy finish, using Northdown for aroma and Bramling Cross for bittering. This yeast was thenceforth used for brews of White Lion, a very pale, flowery 4.3% lager style beer using Cascade hops and the robust, very hoppy 4.5% Golden Lion which uses lots of East Kent Goldings. Golden Lion was "rested" for a while reappeared from time to time. Past specials have been a World Cup special - Three Lions not surprisingly, at 4.2%, and for the Golden Jubilee, Majestic at 5.2%, a strong lager-style beer. Silver Bullet  using lager malt, heavily hopped with Simcoe® by the original creator of the silver series, a 4.6% beer far preferable to Coors' hyped-up silver tinnies of Megaswill, and you might also have caught Golden Oldie at 4%. Visitors  from across the Pennines observe that Ossett folk like their beers really hoppy.

By moving the cold liquor tank out into the yard Bob managed to fit in an additional 3½ barrel fermenter for busy periods. He did develop a new version of I.P.A. with a revised recipe, extraordinarily light coloured and highly flowery with an enduring hop palate at 4.5%. The 5.6% dark beer Dark Force ( alluding to what H.M. said to Paul Burrell, though nobody seemed to get the connection) was brewed with Bamberg smoked malt supplied by Brupaks of Honley giving a China tea smokiness; also a mellow gold Christmas 2002 brew was the 4.6% Three Kings. The 4.6% Chardonnayle® (now 5.1%) first brewed in time for the 2002 Wakefield Beer Festival, a complex & stylish strong pale ale with hints of lemongrass & fruits like a Chardonnay wine, using Willamette hops for aroma, continues to sell, along with Yakima Pale Ale a hoppy and fairly  bitter yellow 4.5% premium ale using hops from Washington State, placed joint second in the Popular Vote at the 2002 Beer Festival then placed top at Huddersfield Beer Festival. Chardonnayle® has since scooped Beer of the Festival at  Spring 2003's Bradford Beer Festival. To keep up with the demand for Chardonnayle® in particular, Bob has had to buy in a lot more 18 gallon casks. Bob’s installed 2 brand new 5 barrel fermenters, locally fabricated, costing approx £3000. These are tall and rectangular in shape—Bob likens them to those upright step-in baths for invalids, only without the doors! He has christened them Bill and Ben. Two of these fit into the space occupied by the squat round 5 barrel job which he bought from Kelham Island, with so much room to spare that he could have fitted a third. He’s had to take his copper out, and will need to rebuild the round block base on which it stands. The cold liquor tank which stood in the open for quite a while now, has gone into the Red Lion Kitchen cold store (that’s what’s behind the other door of the outbuilding), so all in all the brewery yard is trying to be be a much tidier place. The copper is now housed in a little outhouse, well, that's what (almost) Bob says it looks like! Red Lion beers, particularly Chardonnayle®, which made it to the 2003 Great British Beer festival, seem to be acquiring cult status among beer spotters. It has continued to receive high acclaim, including its selection as champion beer at St Albans Beer Festival 2004,  one of the largest festivals in the South East outside London, and as Beer of the Festival at the Dudley Winter Ales Festival 2005. Lion Cub, a 4.1% classic refreshing pale ale using Styrian Goldings hops and Maris Otter Pale Malt was on offer in September 2003 as a  session beers. Lion Tamer at 5.2% appeared in 2005 for the Halifax Mayfest  described as "intensely floral with a malty body". New in March-April 2006 was Pale Sunlight at 4.1%, ultra pale and intensely aromatic from Amarillo hops. See a selection from what was flying about in user groups. 

 

This is what we mean by a microbrewery!

The brewery yard with a stock of casks waiting for a first fill: the upturned fermenter was replaced by a better one acquired at a price Bob couldn't turn down, from Kelham Island Brewery!

Red Lion landlord Pete Trafford (now at the Blacksmith's Arms, Lastingham)  pulls the very first pint.

The turn of the year to 2004 saw a new phase for Red Lion Brewery. Pete and Hils Trafford  moved on to a new pub, The Blacksmith's Arms at Lastingham near Pickering. The locals there enjoyed Red Lion beers and these would regularly find their way up to Lastingham, friends from the Red Lion often taking up a nine in the car boot and calling off at Lastingham on their way to the Moors or Whitby. Bob  brewed Lastingham Ale for Pete at 4.1%, using for the first time English hedgerow hops and pale malt plus a small percentage of crystal malt.

The copper was reset on a masonry base and could be accessed through a port in the front wall of the brewery, whist being protected from the elements by a canopy. This gave space inside the brewhouse for a new 5 barrel fermenter. 

At this time the adjacent public house went through several changes of licensee, and it was not an entirely comfortable time for the brewery. However the pub has found its way again, and this is reflected in its cask ale sales!

The core beer range:

Beer   Original Gravity ABV Description
White Lion 1043 4.3% very pale, flowery, lager style beer using Cascade hops
Yakima Pale Ale 1045.5 4.5% a hoppy & fairly bitter yellow strong ale, using Yakima hops from Washington State
Chardonnayle®  1051.5 5.1% complex stylish strong pale ale with hints of lemongrass & fruits like Chardonnay wine, with Willamette hops for aroma

   

Then... it looked as if a major expansion was in the offing:

                            

Updated story from Summer 2004 edition of O-K from Ossett to Knottingley

It could be the end of skinned knuckles and cricked joints for Bob Hunter of Bob's Brewing Company, trading as the Red Lion Brewery, tucked up like a mediæval hermit behind the pub on Dewsbury Road, Ossett. He has acquired desperately needed new premises, just a couple of miles away near the centre of Horbury. Bob finds that his quickest, and fittest  way between the new plant and home is usually by bike, cutting down to Horbury Junction then using the Calder & Hebble Navigation towpath.

Bob hoped to have been brewing his award-winning hoppy beers  there "by the back end". He has ownership of a 500 sq ft industrial unit, still compact but there's the height to instal the brewing plant as a mini tower.

Whilst there were a number of maltsters in Horbury in the 19th Century and many ale houses then brewed on the premises, a quick search would suggest that this could be the first actual dedicated brewery in the town. Nearby was once the Ring O' Bells pub which served own-brewed ales, so Bob has considered using the name for a new brew. Asked whether the name Red Lion for the beers would continue, Bob was very much affirmative.

Whilst Bob hoped to slim the brewing operation back to just White Lion (keeping his yeast strain going) during the changeover, expecting that a key customer, O'Donoghues in Wakefield, would have had to be supplied via Beer Seller in Leeds, which Bob felt would have put his cask stock in jeopardy, he now finds that S & N  Retail, the new owners, will be prepared to accept local delivery - so Chardonnayle®  is unlikely to be rested through Spring 2005. Latest forecast from Bob is that things will be ready Spring - Summer 2005.

In Autumn 2005 local ale fans were stunned to hear that Bob had been stopped in his tracks by a stroke, from which he has fortunately recovered. However Bob is now doing what he's been told, relatively, that is - he is Bob Hunter after all. 

At first when out of hospital though walking unaided he was finding small distances quite great. He was soon back in brewing mode, although he was no longer trying to do it all himself. He did promise no physical work for two or three months or at least he said so. He and his wife Sarah were really touched by the help given by former colleagues at Ossett Brewing. 

Bob planned that brewing would continue at the Red Lion until at least the end of the year and set on a keen young chap called Andrew Temporal who did a little work at Ossett a few years back. Andrew was to brew at the Red Lion site whilst Bob continued fitting out the new Horbury premises. 

Progress on the new site slowed right down and Bob and Andrew found that by maximising their use of the existing plant they could fulfil all their orders to regular customers both locally and in Dudley. By keeping the supply chain tight they have an efficient turnaround of casks, and with a two-man team most of the beer can go out in 18s. The bulk of production is White Lion with either Yakima Pale Ale, Silver Bullet or Chardonnayle®  making up the balance of production at any one time. One new 5½ barrel fermenter was installed at the end of 2006 with another to follow shortly thereafter. 

Worldwide supply problems with hops after disastrous Autumn 2007 hop harvests in the Northern Hemisphere have necessitated the use of some different varieties so that Solstice appeared at the end of 2007 instead of Chardonnayle and Brewers Gold, a new aromatic yellow session bitter at 3.9% came on the scene early in 2008. 

CLICK FOR  PICTURES OF THE HORBURY BREWERY SITE 

 

Chardonnayle® is a Registered Trade Mark. Brewery Liaison Officer is Bob Wallis.

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