Saturday, February 14, 2009

Australian Beer Etiquette

Most countries with beer cultures have unwritten rules about how to act and behave in the pub. To many who travel to Australia from the USA or Europe (UK excluded), the culture and behavior of drinkers may be, somewhat in lack of a better word, "foreign". Australian readers will be familiar with these rules, but for everyone else they are as follows;

  1. Always keep your beer in your hand, touching your plate or as close to the edge of the table as possible. Don't leave it in the middle of the table as this can become confusing when many people are drinking at the table.
  2. Free beer should always be consumed at a pace greater than that of a beer which had been bought by you or someone in your shouting party.
  3. Never accept a beer if you do not intend to shout on that evening. Shouting "next time" is not acceptable no matter how much interest is involved. This leaves the rest of your drinking party agitated and they will say bad things about you after you leave, or if they've had a few this may lead to violence.
  4. Even worse than the previous rule is accepting beers from the drinking party and then just buying one for yourself when it is your turn. If you make it home without at least one broken bone you should consider yourself lucky!
  5. If you are falling behind in the rounds, complaining that you ate too much is not a legitimate excuse. You should have foreseen the night of drinking ahead and not filled your beer stomach with food. The beer stomach must be kept separate from the food stomach at all times.
  6. If the beer is served in a stubbie, pouring it into a glass to drink is simply not acceptable.
  7. It is a well understood obligation that slower drinkers in a shout must attempt to keep pace with the faster members of a shout, so as to avoid bad feelings and cries of "Hurry up," "Beer Queer," etc.
  8. Changing drinks on people during a shout is considered poor form. I.e., shouting everyone VBs then asking for a Crownie or other "boutique" beer on the return leg.
  9. Guinness is to be served in an appropriate receptacle, i.e. a pint glass. Anything else is simply unacceptable.
  10. When drinking, it is bad manners to talk up your drinking ability when you are not going to perform. This includes the oft observed phrase, "I may not be able to drink much beer, but I'd kill you on Vodka / Bourbon / Scotch," etc.
  11. NEVER, EVER drink so slow as to allow a beer to warm up.
  12. Beer from a tap must be drunk in the largest available beer glass of the establishment at all times, e.g. middie to be superseded by a schooner, pint to be superseded by a stein.
  13. Toohey's or any brand of American beer should never be attempted to passed off as actual beer, unless obvious insult to the recipient/recipients is intended.
  14. One's perceived beer drinking ability should not be in any way overshadowed by the frequency with which one visits the lavatory for urinary purposes. The idea is beer consumption, not beer retention.
  15. Stubbies must always be bought over cans unless there is storage or transport issues.
    Knocking over someone else's beer will only be tolerated if there is a full replacement on the table in an acceptable amount of time.
  16. Ambient temperature has no bearing whatsoever on the desire to consume beer. The day being "too cold" is never an excuse to get out of beer drinking.
  17. No matter how much money is earned by each of the party members the same shouting rules apply, unless one of the more "well-off" members insists on re-shouting. However, this in no way implies a future obligation to repeat the form.

When in Australia, if you follow these simple rules and you will be OK.
Moving from Australian beer to UK beer. I have to commend Jeff on the delicious pint of Tetley's Dark Mild (3.2% abv) I had during my lunch hour today. A rare beer to see in London and a beer that is actually improved by the use of a sparkler. I also had some draught Sierra Nevada Pale Ale last night at Bodean's BBQ. For those who have not heard of this restaurant chain, they serve mediocre Kansas City, MO style BBQ and SNPA on draught. Pity it cost me £5.95 per pint though!

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10 Comments:

Blogger Unknown said...

I have to say I have never heard anyone use the excuse that it is too cold for a beer. Is this solely used in the antipodes?

February 14, 2009 at 1:38 AM  
Blogger Tim said...

Yes it is, apparently. In the 'antipodes' beer is served at just above freezing temperature. Unlike Europe.

February 14, 2009 at 1:45 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

£6 a pint for sierra nevada!? Are you insane?

February 14, 2009 at 11:55 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Drinking in the antipodes sounds like a dispiriting experience.

February 14, 2009 at 12:03 PM  
Blogger Whorst said...

5.95 a pint is nuts, but I think The Doctor can probably afford it. My local does a killer pale for $3.25 a pint during happy hour, 3-6pm. Not an English pint, but it works very well. I paid $4.95 for a pint bottle of Pliny today, which isn't too bad considering it's 8% abv.

February 14, 2009 at 12:29 PM  
Blogger Tim said...

Yeah it's insane, but I had already ordered before I saw the menu. I think it is about £4 a pint at the Castle near Farringdon.

Beer in Australia has come along in leaps and bounds since I emigrated. Most places still have the usual shit on, but nearly 100 new micro and craftbreweries have started in the last 18 months. The way that tax and excise is structured makes them expensive, but there is a market there.

I'll revive real ale in Australia with the two handpumps I bought from Jeff!

February 14, 2009 at 9:43 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

There are obviously enough people in Australia willing to pay a bit more to make it viable, although the logisitics of "real" ale in such a large country with a hot climate must be a nightmare.

My views on brewpubs have soured a bit since i've been in Germany. The quality can be extremely variable.

February 15, 2009 at 7:16 AM  
Blogger Beer Blokes said...

G'Day Tim,
Nice post! I think there needs to be a book published to deal just with the 'Shout'. I will put together a post regarding the state of Real Ale and hand pumps in Australia - there are only a few about but interst is growing.
Cheers,
Prof. Pilsner

February 16, 2009 at 9:25 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Top article there Tim,
I started replying to a few points but ended up posting a whole blog entry in reply over here.

Cheers!

February 16, 2009 at 11:15 AM  
Blogger Tim said...

Cheers guys, Real Ale can work in Australia but the beer needs to be kept at celler temps in a refridgerated environment. Using cask aspirators wis probably also a good idea unless you have massive turnover. CAMRA won't agree, but then they are focussed on being twats rather than anything that makes sense from a business point of view.

Rich - I have heard that German brewpubs tend to vary in quality from town to town. Usually the beer is ordinary but the environment is nice. Have fun at Karnival!

February 16, 2009 at 8:38 PM  

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