Archive for category Useful documents
Guidelines For The Purchase Of Beer Kegs/Casks
Guidelines For The Purchase Of Beer Kegs/Casks –
Both New & Secondhand
Launched at SIBA Conference 2010
Click here for the guidelines
SIBA Technical Helpline – A Summary of progress
Posted by admin in member benefits on November 23, 2009
The SIBA Technical helpline was started in September 2009 and provides 20 minutes free technical advice from an expert in the field at Brewing Research International (part of the Campden BRI Group).
The service has started well. There has been a wide range of enquiries; these have included, for example, questions on:
- how to set up a quality system to meet the requirements of supermarkets
- giving an example of a typical HACCP plan for a brewery
- new product development
- problems with finings
- problems with fermentability of wort
- gas levels in cask beer
The Helpline can also offer advice on compliance with legislation on food and feed safety, customs and excise regulations, labelling of beers, flavour defects in raw materials, in-process or final products and microbial aspects of brewing.
If you have a technical enquiry then please use the helpline service by clicking the helpline button on the menu bar above.
Leading Beer Writer Launches Online Beer Resource
Award-winning beer writer Jeff Evans is the brains behind a new website dedicated to the wonderful world of beer.
Inside Beer (http://www.insidebeer.com) is aimed at beer lovers all around the world, with its mix of breaking news, essential facts and topical features.
Regular items recommending the best places to drink, classic beers and new releases are joined by insights into breweries (big and small), book reviews and a retro section, exploring events that have shaped the brewing world in years gone by. Invaluable information, such as listings of excellent beer shops around the world, a calendar of festivals and events, and major awards results, adds another dimension to the innovative site.
Jeff, an eight-times editor of the Good Beer Guide and a former UK Beer Writer of the Year, is confident that Inside Beer will prove to be a valuable addition to the online beer community for both consumers and those involved in the trade.
“I’m very excited about Inside Beer,” he said. “It allows me to continue the work I’ve been doing for more than 20 years, which involves highlighting the very best beers and showcasing the people behind the world’s most interesting breweries. I hope I can bring a degree of authority and experience to the web community, to complement the zeal and enthusiasm drinkers all over the world put into existing beer websites.”
“There are big plans for Inside Beer and what you currently see online is but the first stage of our development. As the beer world becomes ever more diverse and fascinating, so I hope Inside Beer will reflect this and become increasingly influential.”
Register of Keg, Cask, Downtube Manufacturers/Repairers
For a list of BFBi Container Manufacturers & Repairers Click here
For a list of BFBi Downtube Manufactuers & Repairers Click here
Portman pushes alcohol marketing code awareness
Posted by admin in Marketing, Technical/Legislation on September 28, 2009
People marketing alcoholic drinks must be and look at least 25 years old
That is the key message of a new campaign by drinks industry watchdog Portman Group to raise awareness of its code and independent complaints process.
The Code sets minimum, mandatory standards for all alcohol naming, packaging, brand websites, sponsorships and sampling. One of the rules is that companies should only show people drinking in their marketing if they are and look at least 25 years old.
A series of full page ads in the Times, Telegraph and Guardian will publicise the rules and urge complaints about potential Code breaches.
“We have chosen to promote the 25 year-old rule because it is one of the lesser known restrictions,” said Portman chief executive David Poley.
“It applies to any marketing activity carried out in the UK by a drinks company. The industry has set itself extremely high standards across all its marketing. Now, we want to ensure consumers know the rules and how to complain.”
Taken from: Morning Advertiser
See also: The Publican
SIBA Brewing Helpline
Posted by admin in Technical/Legislation, member benefits on September 28, 2009
The SIBA Technical Helpline provides 20 minutes free technical advice from an expert at Campden BRI. It offers advice on a range of subjects including: technical and scientific aspects of brewing; compliance with legislation on food and feed safety; flavours in raw materials, in-process or final products and microbial aspects of brewing.
Benefits of the Helpline
The key benefits to SIBA members are:
- the service is free to SIBA members
- your enquiry is confidential
- your query will be dealt with by an expert in that topic; Campden BRI is a
world renowned centre of excellence for the brewing industry
- we will assure a speedy response to your problem
How to Use the Helpline
Via the SIBA Website:
You can send an email via the SIBA website using the links below. Your enquiry will be automatically sent to an expert in that topic and you will receive a reply by E-mail.
Initially, members will receive 20 minutes of free on-line advice, with an option to continue on a paid-for basis if required.
By email:
You can email directly to: d.fordyce@bri-advantage.com
By Post:
To: David Fordyce
Head of Membership Services
Campden BRI
Centenary Hall
Coopers Hill Road
Nutfield
Surrey RH1 4HY
By Phone:
Please phone David Fordyce on 01737 824205
Click the heading to submit your query:
SIBA TECHNICAL HELPLINE – FEQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
The SIBA technical Helpline enables SIBA members to contact Campden BRI and get 20 minutes free advice from a technical expert.
We have experts in brewery processes, beer tasting, microbiology, analysis, HACCP and other disciplines to help you. The Helpline has already received a wide range of technical enquiries.
About a fifth of all enquiries are concerned with problems in the brewhouse. These include problems with liquor treatment, adjustment of pH and aeration / oxygenation of wort. A further 11% of enquiries were problems with fermentation; typically these were about yeast management, storage and repitching.
The most enquiries (23%) were about beer in cask or bottle. This included problems with finings, haze, gas content and washing of containers.
Another area of concern was HACCP (17% of enquiries) – many were from brewers who are under pressure from retailers or local authorities to implement HACCP. For these we were able to give guidance on a generic HACCP plan. Related enquiries (6%) were about compliance with supermarket requirements (such as implementing SALSA or an equivalent scheme).
Problems with effluent accounted for just 6% of enquiries but these tended to be quite urgent since they involved high levels of COD or treatment of effluent.
Other areas of concern were flavour issues and compliance with animal feed requirements.
In each case we were able to provide answers by phone or E-mail.
If you require technical help or advice then you can contact us via:
- E-mail (sibahelp@bri-advantage.com)
- phone (David Fordyce on 01737 824205)
- post (David Fordyce, Head of Membership Services, Campden BRI, Centenary Hall, Coopers Hill Road, Nutfield, Surrey,RH1 4HY).
New company forms to run Cyclops
Industry-wide tasting notes scheme to expand to cover more breweries’ beers
The biggest brewing trade bodies have formed a company that will attempt to persuade more breweries to register their beers on the Cyclops tasting notes scheme.
Cask Marque, The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) and The Society of Independent Brewers (SIBA) last week launched a new partnership with Everards, the Leicester brewery that founded Cyclops, to try to attract more of the circa 600 UK breweries to join, and to raise the scheme’s profile among consumers.
So far, 150 brewers’ beers have been registered.
Each of the four parties owns a 25 per cent in the company, which will be run as a not-for-profit organisation.
Cask Marque will take responsibility for the scheme’s administration, CAMRA for promotion to consumers, and SIBA for promoting it to brewers, while Everards will continue to produce the notes based on beer samples.
Brewers must pay to have their beers put on the scheme, but SIBA last year began offering to subsidise members’ applications. Members have to pay £100 for notes on upto five beers, a 60 per cent reduction on the standard charge.
A new consumer-facing website for Cyclops will be launched in mid-2010.
Francis Patton, Cask Marque chairman and Cyclops company secretary, said: “Each of the organisations involved has a complimentary skills sets. If we have a position where the consumer is demanding Cyclops notes and the breweries are buying into it, then this can only help the growth of cask ale.”
Taken from: The Publican
More SIBA members to apply for Cyclops accreditation
The Society of Independent Brewers (SIBA) is expecting a sharp increase in members applying for subsidised Cyclops accreditation following Enterprise Inns’ move to make this a service requirement for all beers bought through SIBA’s Direct Delivery System (DDS), from February next year.
Around 80 members have already had their beers “Cyclops-ed”, taking advantage of the generous subsidy offered by SIBA. Currently, SIBA funds 60% of the Cyclops accreditation fee, meaning that brewers have to find just £100 to put up to five of their beers through the process.
Nick Stafford, managing director of SIBA DDS, says, “Cyclops is becoming more widely-used as a staff training and consumer education tool, and this latest endorsement from Enterprise Inns clearly makes accreditation more compelling to all members of SIBA DDS. We expect more brewers will see the subsidised fee as a small price to pay for the distribution gains that having Cyclops- accredited beers can bring.”
At Enterprise Inns, head of drinks category Grant Simpson adds, “Cyclops accreditation is a way for us to offer greater quality assurance for SIBA beers, to both retailers and customers. We’ve increased the number of SIBA members’ beers available our pubs, in response to growing consumer demand, and we now want to ensure they can be served and retailed in the best possible way. Cyclops, with its consistent and easy to understand taste descriptors for beer, can help us to achieve this.”
Getting all SIBA DDS members ‘Cyclops-ed’ by February will require accreditation of around 900 beers, something that the Cyclops team are confident of achieving comfortably.
The Cyclops subsidy is one of SIBA’s ‘Access to Market’ initiatives, which help members to bring their beers to market. Earlier this year, it launched SIBA Technical Services, which enables its members to offer a more tailored dispense service to its pub customers. The first ‘Access to Market’ scheme, DDS, has helped countless smaller brewers extend distribution of their beers. Sales of DDS-supplied beers grew by 11.9% in the 12 months to end June 2009, compared to the same period last year. Over the same period, the number of pubs buying beers through DDS grew by 5.8%, and sales per pub of DDS-supplied ales were up by 5.7%.
Cyclops was developed by a group of industry bodies as a way of demystifying beer, through simple, objective, industry-standard taste descriptions that are easily understood by bar staff and consumers. The Cyclops scheme, initially devised by Everards, is now operated as an industry-wide initiative by Everards, SIBA, Cask Marque and CAMRA. For more information, visit www.cyclopsbeer.co.uk/
Keg Watch Notice re. Technical Circular 418
BBPA Technical Circular 418 (Keg and Cask Supply Chain Best Practice) was introduced on 9 July 2007. BBPA Council and members approved this document and agreed to implement the best practice measures within their businesses. Section 3.4.8 of TC418 requires the “possessor” to post sorted containers on Spa Trak and requires the container owner to arrange uplift within 28 days (this will reduce to 21 days). If containers are not uplifted within this period, the “possessor” can arrange for Keg Watch to collect these containers and repatriate them to the owner at the owner’s expense. To date, Keg Watch has been providing a ‘honeymoon’ period by contacting the owners prior to uplift in an effort to give them the opportunity to uplift their own containers and thus save themselves the Keg Watch charge.
At the RAMP (Returnable Assets Management Panel) meeting on 2 September 2009 it was agreed that as of 1 October 2009 Keg Watch would no longer make prior contact; instead Keg Watch will arrange the uplift once the request has been received from the “possessor”.
To ensure you do not incur any unnecessary costs please ensure that you access the Spa Trak system on a regular basis and take prompt action to recover any listed containers. Container owners should ensure that they read and familiarise themselves with Technical Circular 418 which is available on the BBPA website, SIBA website or by contacting Keg Watch on 0808 100 1945.
From SIBA News 09 09 09….
Keg Watch collections
Don’t forget, as reported in SIBA News earlier this year, Keg Watch will cease to contact owning brewers who’s casks have been left on Spa-Trak for over 28 days before collecting them upon the holding yards request. This will happen at the end of September. It is your responsibility to check Spa Trak at regular intervals.







