
I don't think we can blame the Temperance movement for anything that's happened since World War 2! The government has been encouraging lower strength beers for many years via taxation. Allied to a pub culture which suits session beers. It's normal behaviour to knock back several pints quickly. (There are many excellent low gravity ales though). Beer quality suffered from the arrival and rapid uptake of lager probably, poor quality lager, and a resulting change in beer drinking habits in the 70s. Which also saw a huge reduction in the number of breweries, and a move to mass production of beer with quality not an important consideration. I think we collectively forgot what good beer was, and the big breweries re-educated people to drink anything offered to them, via an advertising onslaught. I realise this is a half baked history lesson but it was something like that. Camra sprang up in the 70s in reaction to it all and have gradually changed the landscape, and now we have a new wave of craft brewing which has been fuelled by ideas and hops from America. We owe a massive debt to Camra.
I have started to believe, though, that the cask beer obsession has gone too far, it is too dominant, and that cask beer is very hit and miss. I have no axe to grind. Actually, I have always thought this, but it seemed to be an unavoidable aspect of drinking beer that wasn't mass produced rubbish. I have drunk many very average pints of cask ale, made with little commitment to providing a really good product, or served with no commitment to serving a quality product, or just not looked after, out of ignorance or lack of interest/effort. Always hoping to get a really good pint. The British have been lazy when it comes to food and drink for ages. I have often bought bottled beer in pubs with cask ale.
By making my own AG beer I have become dissatisfied with paying £3 - £4 for a pint of cask beer and wondering if it will be worth the price, and becoming very selective about what I drink and where I drink it. I know where to go, locally, and I know a lot of the brewers and which to buy and which not to buy. And I am now inclined to agree with those who say that cask ale is too dominant. I don't want it replaced by any means, it is a unique and wonderful product, fantastic at its best, but there are now other ways of delivering quality beer that is entirely natural, and is much more consistent. It is good to be pretty confident that the beer you buy will be in good nick - and there are keg forms which are natural and very likely to be in excellent condition, from first to last pint. The UK is now a better place to drink beer than at any time since I was 18, in 1979. But there is still a lot of beer served that I wouldn't waste the money on. And the quality of beer from all the new microbreweries varies enormously.