Vintage wines have long been an attraction to wealthy connoisseurs with sophisticated palates.
But now beer, often seen as a drink for the man in the street, is going on sale in pubs with eye-watering prices, with many buying vintage ales as an investment.
The most expensive is the 1997 Fuller’s vintage ale, which costs £250.80 and can be bought online or at Fuller’s pubs across South England.
Based on this year’s prices – the Fuller’s vintage 2016 ale sells for £4.09 a bottle – this means its price has gone up by 6032 per cent.
It has fared better than the 1999 vintage, which sells for £111.20, but that is still a staggering 2736 per cent rise in value.
The second-most expensive vintage is the 1998 edition, at £237.60, followed by the 2000 ale which is selling for £211.20.
The different prices are due to age and rarity but also because of the fact that each ale is brewed with different hops every year, meaning the quality varies.
Experts say more people are buying vintage beer as an investment, with older, more rarer ones now commanding a large price.
A pub in Kings Cross station in London, the Parcel Yard, is one of a number of select bars with a range of Fullers Vintage Ales on sale.
A barman at the pub – a former parcel sorting office at the station - said that the high price is not putting people off: ‘People do order it (the £211.20 vintage ale). I have sold a few but it’s really rare. I have tasted it, it’s nice, it’s quite strong.’
Other pubs selling the ales include the Admiralty in Trafalgar Square or London’s Pride in Heathrow’s Terminal 2.
Fancy a pint?
Fancy a pint?
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Fancy a pint?
P T Barnum said it best .
Re: Fancy a pint?
This one is worth the premium. But it disappears quickly so it's hard to find:


yrs,
rubato


Belgians used to make the best beer. Now we do.Reviews & Accolades
“[Like] Vincent Price reading you a bedtime story…. North Coast does it again! …This beer floored me. …Everything about this beer is strong in a sophisticated way.”
Brewer Cameron
yrs,
rubato
Re: Fancy a pint?
Go for the view, stay for the beer?North Coast does it again! …This beer floored me.
-
Burning Petard
- Posts: 4638
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 5:35 pm
- Location: Near Bear, Delaware
Re: Fancy a pint?
I am very ignorant about beer and its variations. What is the shelf life? What is proper storage? Various wines and distilled products change with aging, but that aging process requires certain conditions, and can easily get older, and not better.
snailgate
snailgate
Fancy A Pint?
How about "designer water?" How can you top this?
$2,500 a pop.:

http://www.wonderslist.com/10-expensive ... er-waters/
$2,500 a pop.:
http://www.wonderslist.com/10-expensive ... er-waters/

“In a world whose absurdity appears to be so impenetrable, we simply must reach a greater degree of understanding among us, a greater sincerity.”
Re: Fancy a pint?
LOL!! Inevitable I suppose though, de gustibus!rubato wrote: Belgians used to make the best beer. Now we do.
yrs,
rubato
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
-
oldr_n_wsr
- Posts: 10838
- Joined: Sun Apr 18, 2010 1:59 am
Re: Fancy a pint?
I was always and ale/stout man, back when beer was not "micro".
Bass Ale or Guinness stout were my usual order (along with a shot or 4 of Jack Daniels)
Most places that served Guinness didn't get enough call for it so it was usually stale. But the shots were always fresh.
I was never into any kind of "flavored" beer.
Pumpkins are not included in the Reinheitsgebot.
Bass Ale or Guinness stout were my usual order (along with a shot or 4 of Jack Daniels)
Most places that served Guinness didn't get enough call for it so it was usually stale. But the shots were always fresh.
I was never into any kind of "flavored" beer.
Pumpkins are not included in the Reinheitsgebot.
Re: Fancy a pint?
Yes, no disputing that. I will say that improvements in our beer selections/quality over the last 30 years has been nothing short of amazing, and we have many great beers to choose from -- like many other countries.Gob wrote:rubato wrote: LOL!! Inevitable I suppose though, de gustibus!
Re: Fancy a pint?
Proof that God does love us . . .
