16 June 1952 - 01 June 2025 It is with great sadness I have to announce the sudden passing of my brother Martyn. For those that wish to attend his funeral it will be held at: Hanworth Crematorium (TW13 5JH) Monday 30th June 2025 @ 12.20 with a small wake at a local pub afterwards| Zythophile - 'Zee-tho-fyle', by Martyn Cornell, an award-winning blog about b...
As a historian of beer I am, of course, delighted that Guinness is progressing with its latest Open Gate project in Covent Garden, London, bringing brewing back to the site of the former Woodyard brewery, once one of the biggest porter breweries in London. But if I read once more that porter got its name… Read More No, porter was NOT named after ‘the porters of Covent Garden, Smithfield and Billingsgate’ The post No, porter was NOT named after ‘the porters of Covent Garden, Smithfield...| Zythophile
I confess I love the opportunity to wax on about the history of beer, and I was delighted to be interviewed by the Cardiff home-brewer and podcaster Andy Taylor on the subject of porter, which ended up as 40 minutes of yakking by me. If you want to know the difference between porter and stout,… Read More Me talking about porter The post Me talking about porter first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile
When you’ve been working on a project for more than seven years, finally being given a finishing date is almost anti-climactic. I started writing what became Porter and Stout: A Complete History in January 2018. I’ve now been told it is due to be published on June 4. I feel I ought to be much… Read More Porter and Stout: The Complete History will be published on June 4 The post Porter and Stout: The Complete History will be published on June 4 first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile
Frederick William Fellowes was born in Beighton, between Norwich and Yarmouth in Norfolk, in 1856, one of the 10 children of the Reverend Thomas Lyon Fellowes. Several of his brothers, like their father, entered the church. But in 1872 an older sister, named Pleasance, married Edward Jesser Coope, only son of Octavius Edward Coope, a… Read More A short history of the King’s Walden brewery The post A short history of the King’s Walden brewery first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile
It’s a claim you will find repeated in dozens – possibly hundreds – of places: that the so-called “Hymn to Ninkasi”, a poem in the Sumerian language to the goddess of beer, at least 3,900 years old, known from three fragmentary clay tablets found in and around the ancient city of Nippur, which stood between… Read More No, the ‘Hymn to Ninkasi’ is NOT a recipe for making Sumerian beer The post No, the ‘Hymn to Ninkasi’ is NOT a recipe for making Sumerian beer first appeared...| Zythophile
As the beer world waits to see whether this really is the end for the Anchor brewery in San Francisco, flagship for an entire beer style, a number of commentators have been suggesting – wrongly – that if anyone tries to carry on with Anchor, then it cannot be done outside San Francisco. There is| Zythophile - 'Zee-tho-fyle', by Martyn Cornell, an award-winning blog about b...
Frederick William Fellowes was born in Beighton, between Norwich and Yarmouth in Norfolk, in 1856, one of the 10 children of the Reverend Thomas Lyon Fellowes. Several of his brothers, like their father, entered the church. But in 1872 an older sister, named Pleasance, married Edward Jesser Coope, only son of Octavius Edward Coope, a| Zythophile - 'Zee-tho-fyle', by Martyn Cornell, an award-winning blog about b...
Warming myself at midnight by an open-air firepit over which half a cow was being slowly and expertly roasted, while 50 or so slightly drunk South American brewers sang a word-perfect rendition of Bohemian Rhapsody loudly and enthusiastically was not a direction I ever expected my beer writing career to take. Still, every opportunity for… Read More In search of a Paraguayan beer style The post In search of a Paraguayan beer style first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile
The sub-title of my new book, Around the World in 80 Beers, is “A Global History of Brewing”. I hope this indicates to potential purchasers that the book is considerably more than just another round-up of international beers in the tradition that goes back almost 50 years, to Michael Jackson’s seminal World Beer Guide of 1977. The idea… Read More Around the World in 80 Beers: a journey through time rather than in space The post Around the World in 80 Beers: a journey through time...| Zythophile
The Tipperary pub in Fleet Street, London, has reopened after four years of closure, excellent news, since it’s one of the most attractive little pubs in the City. Planning permission was actually granted in April 2020 for its conversion into office use, but one of the very few benefits of the Covid pandemic was that… Read More The Tipperary’s back but the history is even more confused The post The Tipperary’s back but the history is even more confused first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile
A fascinating pair of pieces of ephemera, these, because they tells us something about brewing and beer consumption in large households and by farmers, and give a clue as to why farmers who brewed sometimes became actual commercial brewers. The first is a 163-year-old bill for malt and hops from Samuel Wright of Walkern in… Read More How much beer did a 19th century farmer-brewer brew? The post How much beer did a 19th century farmer-brewer brew? first appeared on Zythophile.| Zythophile