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Ken Don obituary

4 days ago
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My colleague Ken Don, who has died aged 80, was a passionate real ale brewer who played a key role in saving Maris Otter, considered the finest variety of malting barley.He spent most of his career at the Young’s Ram Brewery in Wandsworth, south London, where the ruling Young family was committed to cask-conditioned beer.Ken was born in Alloa, in Clackmannanshire, the son of Ian Don, who worked in a local glass factory, and his wife, Margaret (nee Cook).He was educated at Alloa academy and trained as a brewer at Alloa Brewery, where the main product was Skol lager.Keen to broaden his skills, he went on the brewing and distilling course at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh.

As a fully accredited brewer, he worked at breweries in Burton upon Trent, Watford and Wrexham before joining Young’s in 1980; he spent the rest of his career there,In 1969 he married Dorothy Dunbar, who worked as an administrator at BP’s plant at Grangemouth, and they had three daughters,After the family moved to London, Ken maintained his Scottish roots by taking a keen interest in both rugby and Motherwell football club,As head brewer at Wandsworth, he enthusiastically upheld Young’s support for cask ale at a time when many other brewers were developing pasteurised and artificially carbonated keg beers,The Young’s Ram Brewery was fiercely traditional.

It delivered beer to local pubs by horse-drawn drays and produced Bitter, Special Bitter and the seasonal Winter Warmer using the finest ingredients – Maris Otter barley and Fuggles and Goldings hops.Ken was shocked to learn in 1989 that seed merchants and farmers were de-listing Maris Otter.They were replacing it with “high yielding” new varieties that grew more to the acre.He joined with a handful of other brewers to offer contracts to farmers to continue to grow Maris Otter.They felt its rich biscuit aroma and flavour were essential to the character of their beers.

They were successful.Banham seed merchants in Norfolk and Warminster Maltings in Wiltshire bought the rights to Maris Otter and it is now used by scores of British brewers and exported to 20 countries.Ken faced a new challenge in 2006 when Young’s brewery closed.John Young, the chairman who had driven its success, had died and there were no members of the family who wanted to continue brewing.Young’s became a pub company, owning more than 200 outlets and it still needed beer.

The Young’s ales were transferred to Charles Wells’s brewery in Bedford, where Ken spent a month treating the local water and training his yeast culture to work in Wells’s enclosed conical fermenters, which were quite different from the open vessels at the Ram,The Bedford versions were greeted with enthusiasm by Young’s demanding drinkers,They gather in Young’s pubs every December to taste the new version of Winter Warmer and compare it to previous vintages,After Ken retired, the beers moved again, to Banks’s Brewery in Wolverhampton, which is due to close,Marston’s Brewery in Burton will be their next home, where they will honour Ken’s great contribution to traditional beer.

Ken is survived by Dorothy and their daughters, Karen, Lesley and Susan.
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Ken Don obituary

My colleague Ken Don, who has died aged 80, was a passionate real ale brewer who played a key role in saving Maris Otter, considered the finest variety of malting barley. He spent most of his career at the Young’s Ram Brewery in Wandsworth, south London, where the ruling Young family was committed to cask-conditioned beer.Ken was born in Alloa, in Clackmannanshire, the son of Ian Don, who worked in a local glass factory, and his wife, Margaret (nee Cook). He was educated at Alloa academy and trained as a brewer at Alloa Brewery, where the main product was Skol lager. Keen to broaden his skills, he went on the brewing and distilling course at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh

4 days ago
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‘The quality of Lebanese wine is absolutely incredible’

Lebanon has one of, if not the most ancient winemaking traditions in the world, so it stands to reason that we ought to drink more of it. This historic wine industry started way back with the Phoenicians, who spread viticulture throughout the Mediterranean, and then, in 1857, Jesuit monks planted vines from Algeria in the Bekaa valley, in an area that is today one of the country’s most prestigious wine-producing regions.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more

4 days ago
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Rachel Roddy’s salad of hazelnuts, gorgonzola and honey dressing | A kitchen in Rome

Recently, I listened to the Italian chefs Niko Romito and Salvatore Tassa in conversation about Italian food culture, and in particular the role of the trattoria. During the warm conversation, Romito, who is one of Italy’s most visionary chefs and whose Ristorante Reale in Abruzzo has three Michelin stars, spoke about the first time he ate at Tassa’s Nu’ Trattoria Italiana dal 1960 in Acuto, which is in the province of Frosinone about an hour south of Rome. Romito recalled the homely atmosphere and Tassa as an old-school host: welcoming, communicative and the conduit (which didn’t sound pretentious when he said it) between local traditions, producers and those who came to eat. But Romito also described a dish of onions, simply braised, but of such goodness that he couldn’t stop thinking about and imagining them. In fact, Romito credits those onions as being the starting point for one of his own most well-known dishes: “absolute” onion broth with parmesan-filled pasta and toasted saffron

4 days ago
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How to turn store cupboard grains, nuts, seeds and dried fruit into a brilliant nutritious loaf – recipe | Waste not

Today’s rich, nutritious and no-knead bread is a cornerstone of my weekly routine. Every Saturday, I make a simple rye bread dough, and gather whatever grains, nuts and seeds need using up – from forgotten millet to that last handful of brazil nuts – and soak them overnight. By Sunday lunchtime, the house will be filled with the homely aroma of fresh bread emerging from the oven.When my daughter won’t eat anything but a slice of toast, I want to know she’s still being nourished, so I’ve raised our nutrient baseline by reformulating the recipes for our everyday staples – that is, bread, pasta, porridge and even cakes – with whole grains, omega-rich seeds and nutrient-dense ingredients such as moringa powder. Of course, every family has its own tastes and comfort foods, so these changes need to be gradual

5 days ago
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Cheaper imported chicken and beef increasingly seen in UK supermarkets

Cheap chicken and beef from Australia, Poland and Uruguay is on the rise on UK supermarket shelves, according to the National Farmers’ Union, as supermarkets look for money-saving options.The NFU regularly monitors supermarket shelves and notes that Morrisons is now selling raw chicken from Poland in its poultry aisle. Chicken in Poland is generally produced to different standards from those in the UK, and is cheaper as a result. Morrisons requires that for its UK chicken, poultry must be kept at a maximum stocking density of 30kg/m2, giving the chickens more space to roam. In Poland, this is up to 39kg/m2

5 days ago
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The secret to good coleslaw | Kitchen aide

What’s the trick to great coleslaw?Chris, Paignton, Devon“Coleslaw is such an under-rated salad,” says the Guardian’s Felicity Cloake, whose latest book, Peach Street to Lobster Lane, was published last week. “Familiarity breeds contempt.” (As do those claggy tubs you get in supermarkets.) The whole point of coleslaw is that the veg has to be crisp, which is why Cloake shreds rather than grates the cabbage (a mandoline or food processor is helpful here). “That will leave it less mushy

6 days ago
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Andrew Lloyd Webber is ‘hot again’ –with help from new kids on musicals block

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How to Train Your Dragon to Neil Young: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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British Library to reinstate Oscar Wilde’s reader card 130 years after it was revoked

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The Guide #195: How Reddit made nerds of us all

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Seth Meyers on Trump’s falling approval rating: ‘Worth remembering that people don’t like this’

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‘Difficult love’: Spanish publisher reprints groundbreaking book of Lorca’s homoerotic sonnets

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