Get On The List
Get the latest Men's Style Advice, Evergreen Guides, Shopping Tips, and Exclusive Deals From Today's Top Brands.
We independently evaluate all recommended products and services. Any products or services put forward appear in no particular order. if you click on links we provide, we may receive compensation.
April Fool’s day is only funny if you’re a fabled scholar and few human beings are sufficiently well-informed to challenge your high jinks, or you’re a 12-year-old trying to convince a younger sibling that rabbit droppings are in fact chocolate covered raisins. Barney Toy, bar manager at London’s Alice-in-wonderland inspired Little Bat (from the team behind legendary drinking hole Callooh Callay), however, has crafted an April Fool’s gag that we can joyfully get on board with: a large, fizzing tankard of citrus-spiced whisky, masquerading as a humble pint of beer. “It’s a cool surprise,” says Toy of his creation. “It looks like a big frosty mug of ale, but actually it’s a sweet, fruity cocktail. Topped with beer.” Weaving together a light malt and toasty ale with vivid grapefruit and zestful lime might indeed sound farcical, but beer-based cocktails have a long and seasonal lineage, dating back to the 17th century when the flip first became popular. Beer – or mead – was in plentiful supply, and during the biting winter months, it was heated and coddled with whisky, eggs and sugar in order to warm the cockles (and enliven the spirits, of course). Likewise, recent years have seen buoyant, refreshing beer cocktails surge in popularity during the sultry summer months, with lemon and lime playing frequent bedfellows to the cardinal ingredient. The Grumpy Thompson, with its spiced whisky barrel bitters, (“bitters are like salt and pepper for cocktails: they fill in the gaps”) straddles both species, making it the perfect year-rounder. “The syrup, made with Newcastle Brown Ale and soft, dark sugar, adds a bitter-sweet note to the cocktail, which rounds out the flavour but also highlights the fresh citrus palate,” says Toy. “Conversely, the ale adds a warm, nutty, malty dimension.” And just who is this Grumpy Thompson? “Simon Thompson, the manager at Callooh Callay, is from Newcastle and is a grumpy (loveable) character. This one’s for him.”

80ml Monkey Shoulder 80ml “Grumpy Northern” syrup 50ml fresh pink grapefruit juice 50ml fresh lime juice 8 dashes whisky barrel bitters 120ml Newcastle Brown Ale
375ml Newcastle Brown Ale 175g demerara sugar
Cubed ice Frosted beer mug
From delicious to stratospheric… “Always use fresh ingredients and as much ice as you can fit in the glass: it should be as cold as possible. If you can, serve the drink in a metal tankard.” Shopping list… “Monkey shoulder is a great option here as it’s not too dominant, but any softer Speyside-style whisky would work. A mild, malty ale would work in place of the Newcastle Brown. If you can’t find whisky barrel bitters, Angostura bitters are an easy alternative.”
We independently evaluate all recommended products and services. Any products or services put forward appear in no particular order. if you click on links we provide, we may receive compensation.
April Fool’s day is only funny if you’re a fabled scholar and few human beings are sufficiently well-informed to challenge your high jinks, or you’re a 12-year-old trying to convince a younger sibling that rabbit droppings are in fact chocolate covered raisins. Barney Toy, bar manager at London’s Alice-in-wonderland inspired Little Bat (from the team behind legendary drinking hole Callooh Callay), however, has crafted an April Fool’s gag that we can joyfully get on board with: a large, fizzing tankard of citrus-spiced whisky, masquerading as a humble pint of beer. “It’s a cool surprise,” says Toy of his creation. “It looks like a big frosty mug of ale, but actually it’s a sweet, fruity cocktail. Topped with beer.” Weaving together a light malt and toasty ale with vivid grapefruit and zestful lime might indeed sound farcical, but beer-based cocktails have a long and seasonal lineage, dating back to the 17th century when the flip first became popular. Beer – or mead – was in plentiful supply, and during the biting winter months, it was heated and coddled with whisky, eggs and sugar in order to warm the cockles (and enliven the spirits, of course). Likewise, recent years have seen buoyant, refreshing beer cocktails surge in popularity during the sultry summer months, with lemon and lime playing frequent bedfellows to the cardinal ingredient. The Grumpy Thompson, with its spiced whisky barrel bitters, (“bitters are like salt and pepper for cocktails: they fill in the gaps”) straddles both species, making it the perfect year-rounder. “The syrup, made with Newcastle Brown Ale and soft, dark sugar, adds a bitter-sweet note to the cocktail, which rounds out the flavour but also highlights the fresh citrus palate,” says Toy. “Conversely, the ale adds a warm, nutty, malty dimension.” And just who is this Grumpy Thompson? “Simon Thompson, the manager at Callooh Callay, is from Newcastle and is a grumpy (loveable) character. This one’s for him.”

80ml Monkey Shoulder 80ml “Grumpy Northern” syrup 50ml fresh pink grapefruit juice 50ml fresh lime juice 8 dashes whisky barrel bitters 120ml Newcastle Brown Ale
375ml Newcastle Brown Ale 175g demerara sugar
Cubed ice Frosted beer mug
From delicious to stratospheric… “Always use fresh ingredients and as much ice as you can fit in the glass: it should be as cold as possible. If you can, serve the drink in a metal tankard.” Shopping list… “Monkey shoulder is a great option here as it’s not too dominant, but any softer Speyside-style whisky would work. A mild, malty ale would work in place of the Newcastle Brown. If you can’t find whisky barrel bitters, Angostura bitters are an easy alternative.”