Jump to content

Don't Miss a Beat

Join the UK's most passionate festival community. Keep up with the latest conversations, line-up rumours, and music news.

250,000+ Members

Connect with a massive network of fellow festival-goers.

Lively Discussions

Thousands of active topics on music, campsites, and tips.

Hot Rumours & News

Hear about secret sets and lineup drops before anyone else.

Create Free Account
OR
  • Sign Up!

    Join our friendly community of music lovers and be part of the fun 😎

The cider thread


Guest LittlemissC

Recommended Posts

I'm strangely not much of a cider drinker at home, but as Glasto draws nearer I feel all twitchy and excited at the thought of my first pint of hot n' spicy, Brothers, and various types from the cider bus.

I think for me I just save my cider love for the big G, and it adds to the whole experience.

That said, I've had a few blootered times where I've forgot how damned potent the stuff is, like last year where on the Friday I'd missed the first Posh Friday meet and went to the Brothers bar until the next meet.

Few pints of Brothers + baking hot sun = me needing to go for a lie down laugh.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I drank 7 bottles of Brothers Pear on sat night. I woke up the next morning to stories of me constanly repeating myself when talking, rocking from side to side when sleeping and that fact i'd decided to unravel one of my shoelaces and my trainers , non of which I remember.

:lol:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When ever my friends order any form of 'pear cider' they get a 10 minute lecture on how 'pear cider' is an oxymoron and it's actually called perry with a good real perry easily being identifiable by the fact it'll give you the shits after a few.[/short rant]

As for the Cider bus I'm not too keen, too much tanins for my tastebuds. I preferred the sweeter stuff I found in a cider bar hidden in Shangri La. I have vague memories of this anyway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When ever my friends order any form of 'pear cider' they get a 10 minute lecture on how 'pear cider' is an oxymoron and it's actually called perry with a good real perry easily being identifiable by the fact it'll give you the shits after a few.[/short rant]

Edited by snipe
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Orchard Pig whose orchard and cider house is literally a mile or so west of the festival fence sells its wares at a stall just before the west car parks entrance. Thats lovely stuff, proper pressed cider. You can get in on tap in a fair amount of pubs now too. You have to book or call ahead I think if you want to visit apparently.

Avoid the Black Rat if you see that sold by the roadside, it is not pleasant and scarily orange in colour too.

If you are in the area on the Tuesday pre fest, head over to Street and to Hecks cider farm. Their single varietal perry DOES as gravejr mentions, gives you the most evil of bowel movements but the bloody stuff tastes SOOOOO good, almost like pear juice and yet 8.4%. There are Efesters I know who will actually take Imodium before indulging in this awesome tasting liquid IBS in a pint pot! :D

When we first bought it in 09, a number of us thought we had caught food poisoning but no, it was the fruit acids eating away at our bowels :rolleyes: Heyho!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A true perry gets its alcohol from fermentation of pears. Pear cider as sold by brothers, kopparberg, bulmers, rekkerdelig etc is usually cider (fermented apples) that pear flavouring has been added to. I'm sure some traditional perry is being remarketed as Pear Cider now but I've yet to see one.

Anyone recommend any of the roadside ciders that pop up close to the festival? Never been brave enough to risk them but perhaps this year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Then it's still perry and I will be walking round Glastonbury sectretly getting really pissed of every time I hear someone calling Brothers cider. Likely I'll be too pissed having caved in to drinking what evers cheap and strong(ish) and stop not caring pretty quickley

I need to look this up for my next lecture. I can also add that that even alot of the 'factory' ciders (all the White ____ and possibly Stongbow etc. as well)are fermented corn syrup with about 10% apple from concentrate and loads of sweeteners.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Then it's still perry and I will be walking round Glastonbury sectretly getting really pissed of every time I hear someone calling Brothers cider.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've posted this before after reading it in the CAMRA magazine but here you go...prepare to be quite possibly surprised when you find out just how many of these 'ciders' you love arent 'real'

Ciders not recognised as being Real

Below is a list of the most common ciders that CAMRA does not recognise as being real:

Please note that this list is not necessarily complete.

The most common reasons a cider or perry is not considered to be real are that it is carbonated, pasteurised, micro-filtered, or concentrate juice has been used.

Addlestones

Aspall

Ashton Press

Brothers

Bulmers

Diamond White

Dry Blackthorn

Gaymer's

Jacques

K Cider

Kopparberg

Magners

Merrydown

Rattler

Rekorderlig

Samuel Smith's

Saxon

Saxon Farm

Scrumpy Jack

St Helier

Stowford Press

Strongbow

Taunton

Thatchers Gold

Thistly Cross Cider

Westons Ice

Woodpecker

'any cider with fruit flavour added'

......................................

Basically anything that is carbonated hasnt probably seen the inside of a proper cider press.

Linky to CAMRA's notes about real cider etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If on the other hand, the cider you are drinking comes from a barrel, has bits floating in it, is a funny brown/prangey colour, tastes and smells fairly farmyardy and has you rushing to the longdrops within a pint, then you are drinking 'real' cider.

I am very lucky to live just 14 or so miles from the National Cider & Perry Centre between Lewes & Eastbourne in East Sussex. Tis a lovely place, 50 barrels of cider from across the country and the choice changes a couple of times a year. Ok, so it isnt in the heart of Zoider Country but the view is as lovely as Somerset and being able to pop down whenever I want and buy Cider Bus cider (Burrowhill) on a whim is marvellous!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Im coming into Glasto (soooo excited!!) by car and wanna get a plastic keg of proper good somerset cider on the way in I think, I've read that you can get Orchard pig but are there any others being sold that people know of?

Cheers m'dears

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is surprisingly nice for only £1.48 for two litres (not too sweet and almost appears quite 'flat'). Bit weak at 4.2, maybe good as a breakfast cider.

http://groceries.asda.com/asda-estore/search/searchcontainer.jsp?trailSize=1&searchString=cider+hawk&domainName=Products&headerVersion=v1&_requestid=43523

For those who can splash out on £3 for two litres, the pear variety's also very nice (and goes up to a whopping 4.5 - maybe have that one for lunch).

http://groceries.asda.com/asda-estore/search/searchcontainer.jsp?trailSize=1&searchString=cider&domainName=Products&headerVersion=v1&_requestid=45267

All joking aside, I drink a fair bit of cider (I is Brizzle) and I would recommend both of these (especially for the cash).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Latest Activity

    • So bad honestly. I get that bad weather happens but their communication was non existent. When you're managing crowds of tens of thousands of people, it's just not good enough. I left when Massive Attack was cancelled (the first time) and it genuinely did feel unsafe trying to get out. No one knew what was going on, people still sitting in the ground when there were hoards of people trying to leave, no crowd management at all...   I've been to PS enough times to know sometimes you need to just roll with it but this was way worse than "the bar queue was 30 minutes long".    Today will be better but still feel super disappointed. 
    • Alkaline Trio 90 Barrington Levy 95 Basement Jaxx 120 Billy Bragg 100 Billy Ocean 100 The Black Keys 90 Carl Cox 100 Chase & Status 115 Chelsea Wolfe 85  CMAT 105 Confidence Man 150 MAX Dave 35  David Byrne 145 Disclosure 65  Everything Everything 105 Faithless 80  Fatboy Slim 100 Four Tet 120  Funeral for a Friend 50 Garbage 100 GOAT 105  Greentea Peng 120 Happy Mondays 80 Hollie Cook 90 Jorja Smith 100 José González 100 Joy Crookes 120  Judas Priest 90 Kasabian 80  Kneecap 110  The Last Dinner Party 35 Levellers 85  Limp Bizkit 35  Linkin Park 90 Lorde 120 Madness 75  The Maccabees 100 Neck Deep 135  Nile Rodgers & Chic 100 Overmono 100 Pixies 65 The Prodigy 130  Pulp 150 MAX RAYE 100 Ren 85 Richard Ashcroft 95  Say She She 85 Scissor Sisters 120 Self Esteem 120 Skunk Anansie 100 Stereolab 120  The Streets 110 Super Furry Animals 110 Tems 50  Thundercat 90 Tom Jones 70  Two Door Cinema Club 20 Tyler, the Creator 75 Underworld 115 (+10) Wet Leg 90  Wilco 95  The Wombats 90 Wolf Alice 135
    • Solid list...  but i must ask?  are you excluding Lime Garden & Tomora as you didn't like them or is it that you havent listened to them? 
    • It was Brooklyn last year, and I seem to remember a Guinness tent 
  • Featured Products

  • Hot Topics

  • Latest Tourdates

×
×
  • Create New...