Ballarat Bitter

Ballarat Bitter Can; produced in 2006

Ballarat Bitter is a 4.9% (abv) Australian beer, originally brewed in Ballarat, Australia by the Ballarat Brewing Company and now owned by the Japanese conglomerate Asahi Breweries.

History

The beer is of the bitter top fermented ale variety,[1] and was traditionally sold in 750ml longnecked bottles, with the label featuring the character "Ballarat Bertie", who was conceived in 1926 on a train journey between Melbourne and Sydney by a Ballarat Brewing Company director and an advertising agency.[2]

The Ballarat Brewing Company beer division was bought out by Carlton & United Beverages (or Carlton & United Breweries as it was known at the time, commonly abbreviated to 'CUB') in 1989, and the Ballarat bottling operations subsequently closed. The Ballarat Brewing Company itself, board of directors and ownership of 160 pubs across Victoria continued until taken over by Foster's Group in 1997 with its buyout of remaining shares.[3]

Limited edition releases

In December 2006, following a request by the crew of the Anzac class frigate HMAS Ballarat (which uses the caricature of "Ballarat Bertie" from the label as a mascot[4]) to Catherine King, the Member of Parliament representing the Division of Ballarat, Foster's Group (CUB's parent company) created a limited run of the beer.[5] An initial release of 40 pallets (4,800 slabs, 115,200 individual cans) sold out within days of release, with $1 from every slab donated to the United Way charities.[5] A second run of 50 pallets was released shortly after.

In November 2011 another limited edition release of the beer was brewed by CUB, with the 300 kegs being distributed between 26 licensed premises in Ballarat for the Ballarat Cup weekend. A limited supply of cans was available the following month.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Great Aussie Beer Page - Bitter Ale".
  2. ^ Andrew Jefferson (17 November 2006). "Cheers to the return of a great Ballarat icon". The Courier. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  3. ^ Australian Beers' History of CUB
  4. ^ Bertie sets sail again (via Internet Archive)
  5. ^ a b "Buying up big on Bertie beer". The Courier. 12 December 2006. Archived from the original on 15 August 2008. Retrieved 23 August 2008.
  6. ^ Jordan Oliver (17 November 2011). "Ballarat Bitter kegs released to city pubs". The Courier. Retrieved 17 November 2011.

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