When I was young it was common custom in many pubs to "recycle" back to the customer, overspill from poured beer in the drip tray, Usually a tell tale pint glass with a few inches of beer stood by the drip tray and unless you watched like a hawk, a small amount of this was put in your glass first and then topped up with fresh beer. If you were unaware of this bad practice, or just not near the offending pump and thus oblivious - then that's what happened. Nearly everywhere. Breweries and landlords then, as now, make use of what they can to preserve stocks and gain margin. I was told once - though the truth of it may be different - that the reason tall founts, keg or cask were used in Scotland, was to make the visibility of the beer and therefore its freshness obvious to the customer. Attempted "slopping" the consumer became something of a game, where you'd fix the barperson with a gaze that said
"Don't try it with me Pal" while he or she looked for ways to do it without you noticing.
I know this as I was both an avid watcher outer for such happenings and, in my years behind the bar, a reluctant exponent of it, though only when the Boss was there. When he wasn't, the drip trays were tipped down the sink and we also took great care to avoid wastage in pouring. I too, way in the past, have been warned by an intended sloppee - in no uncertain terms - not to try and do it with him. And rightly so.
This still goes on,but perhaps much less nowadays. I get the impression that in these times of Health and Safety and much better hygiene awareness, that most in the trade refrain from it, if not always, at least in most cases. I for one always try and look to ensure I see my glass filled freshly. Over the years I have though, pulled various people up for it and refused the pint. (A small amount of freshly spilled beer from a pressurised keg is unlikely to show much sign of itself. Not so in cask beer, where even a relatively small amount of flat beer can take the edge off the liveliest pint.)
Now sadly this meander down memory lane has a point other than me thinking fondly back to unsullied pints of Diamond Heavy or Tennents Lager. On Thursday I was shown in the most blatant of ways, that in some places, this malodourous practise flourishes, though fortunately I was the witness in this case, not the victim.
In London and in increasingly heavy rain, we took a stroll round Covent Garden buying Christmas cards and watching the world go by. In time we had a couple of pints of excellent stout in the
Porterhouse Brewery in Maiden Lane and then in even wetter weather, headed somewhere that I could try a half of
Sam Smith's Yorkshire Stingo, rarely if ever, seen on cask. A bit of drama ensued first of all as we entered though. A old lady was lying sparked out on the tiles, with anxious folks around her. In a booth overlooking the bar, we were asked to watch belongings as they fettled the woman in distress. I ordered a warm up pint of
Old Brewery Bitter which had that distinct bottom of the barrel feeling about it. Not quite bad enough to call for a replacement, but which was half heartedly, half supped without enjoyment.
From the vantage point of the booth, I had a good view of the set of pumps (both cask and keg) at the bottom of the bar. The pub was rammed and the barstaff busy. One lad stood out. He fussed over a new member of staff, showing her how to pour, though to me he made a pig's ear of it more than she did. I first noticed that Sam's Nitro Stout was virtually headless though a bit of judicious swirling produced a slight one. Gas gone? Almost certainly. But he carried on regardless. After a few more pints the bitter went off. This would be interesting. With the sparkler still on (Just makes the operation less speedy and slick) two or three pints of froth were pulled into a jug, then poured into a couple of glasses, which along with the half pint or so from when the beer went off, they were put to one side. The customer waiting for his pint was further up the bar. His half pint of cask bottoms was then topped up with the new beer. Urgh.
The horror show increased in intensity. Next the jug was shared into pint glasses and the beer topped up again with fresh. Now much of this beer would have been in the beer line and thus bottom of the barrel. I shudder to think what it tasted like. Wheat beer was then taken directly from its drip tray, poured into a beer glass and the beer topped up with fresh. All such spillages were, in varying amounts, given direct to customers, but not to these that could see what was going on. Shocking stuff.
Now was this the rogue behaviour of one barman? Was he under instruction? Did he simply not know better than to do this? I couldn't say, but the pressure on Sam's landlords to deliver the maximum volume from containers is well known.
By this time, the old lady's relatives had come back. She was fine and was apparently in the habit of conking out. Her daughter took her off in cab, while the rest of he family returned to drinking. We didn't have another drink given what we'd both witnessed and went off elsewhere.
It was still pouring down.
So I didn't have my Stingo, a mere £7.40 a pint, but I will do before I go back North again. Just not in a very ornate pub in Holborn.
We nipped into the Citte of Yorke after, but it was rammed. Oh and in the other pub in Holborn we paid by card - as everyone else seemed to be doing. If Humph stops that in London, he'll have no business left.
Last word. I have a witness. E watched all of the horror show with me.