A Harrogate brewery has become a hotspot to see some of the UK’s most high profile comedians.
Rooster’s Brewing Co, which is based at Hornbeam Park, has played host to the likes of Jon Richardson, Matt Forde and Maisie Adams in the last 12 months.
This past week, Lucy Beaumont, who is known for her appearances on Taskmaster and Meet The Richardsons, played an intimate performance in the brewery’s taproom ahead of her nationwide tour.
Much of the draw comes down to the monthly comedy night held on the last Thursday of every month, called Really Funny Comedy.
Britain’s Got Talent finalist, Micky P Kerr, works closely with the brewery to organise the event, which has seen the likes of Josh Pugh, Kiri Pritchard-Mclean and social media star Troy Hawke perform.
Tom Fozard, commercial director at Rooster’s, used to host comedy gigs while at university.
He said the feedback from comics who perform at the brewery has been encouraging.
Mr Fozard said:
“I used to host comedy gigs with a local promoter while working for my university Students’ Union longer ago than I care to remember, so getting to work alongside Micky P Kerr and attract the talent we have done in such a short space of time is incredibly fun and rewarding.
“The feedback we’re getting from the comics has also been great, so I know what we’re doing is being well received both from a gig-goer’s point of view, but also backstage. Everyone also gets to enjoy a decent pint or two with their comedy too, which is an added bonus.”
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Knaresborough prepares for three-day beer festival
Knaresborough’s festival feel this month will be lubricated by the return of the town’s annual beer festival.
Beer will be flowing from 5pm on Friday, August 18 to Sunday, August 20 at Knaresborough House. Entry is free.
Knaresborough Lions has once again organised the event as part of the town’s 10-day arts festival Feva.
Drinkers will be able to choose from 22 beers and seven ciders, along with lager, Prosecco, wine, Aperol Spritz and non-alcoholic drinks. There will also be a burger bar.
The beers include local favourites from Harrogate-based Roosters Brewing Company and other Yorkshire breweries as well as ales from further field, including Cornwall and Norfolk.
Ciders range from a traditional scrumpy to a perry or a marmalade-flavoured offering.
The main date is the Saturday afternoon when the beer festival will run alongside Feva’s Picnic in the Park at Knaresborough House.
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Lions president Bob Godsell said:
“We’re keeping our fingers crossed for sunshine again this year.
“Our profits from the beer sales help finance Picnic in the Park, so we’re looking forward to people being able to enjoy the live music with a delicious pint in hand.”
Visitors can buy a starter pack of six tokens for £12 which entitles them to three pints and a commemorative glass. Otherwise tokens will be on sale for £2 each with all pints priced at £4.
Sessions run from Friday 5pm-11pm, Saturday midday-11pm and Sunday midday-5pm — or until the beer runs out.
Further information, including taster notes, is available on the Knaresborough Lions Facebook page.
Photo shows (left to right), Lions Lynn Nudds, Jeremy Crow, Mark Flood, Martin Brock, Jon Smithells, Tony Pedel and Matt Walker
Suds With Buds celebrates world’s brewers, street food and live music

This story is sponsored by Rooster’s Brewing Co.
Brewers from across the UK and the United States have been invited to bring their finest beers to Harrogate for Rooster’s Brewing Co’s first ever Suds With Buds festival of beer, street food and music.
The event on Saturday, July 1 will see more than 20 breweries converge on Rooster’s Hornbeam Park home, spanning the brewery and yard, Taproom, beer garden and The Sample Room upstairs.
Tom Fozard, commercial director at Rooster’s, said:
“Suds With Buds is an event we’ve been wanting to put on for several years, but one thing or another has stopped initial ideas from becoming reality… until now! On the back of Rooster’s celebrating our 30th anniversary in 2023, we’re biting the bullet and making it happen.
“Some of the UK’s most respected and talked about breweries will be descending upon our little corner of the world, as well as a handful travelling from much further afield, creating a truly unique, combined line-up of over 100 beers.”
Brewers and food from across the world
Joining brewers from Britain, such as Burning Sky in Sussex and Cromarty Brewing Co in Scotland, will be Colorado brewers Odell Brewing Co and Crooked Stave, and Stiegl from Austria. Some brewers will even be flying in specially to pour their brews in person, including: Jeremy Grinkey, co-owner of California start-up Everywhere; Kevin Smith, head brewer at Bale Breaker Brewing Co in Yakima, Washington; Evan Price, owner of Green Cheek Brewing Co in California; and Jaakko Saivosalmi, managing director of Finnish cider company Brinkhall.
On top of the beers, some of the tastiest street-food the North has to offer will be served up by local legends Paradise Tap & Taco and Jack In A Box, as well as Knead Pitta and the Pizza Bus from further afield.
There will also be live music on a specially-built stage in the beer garden, featuring Sheffield two-piece Hot Soles, Ralph Pelleymounter, David Broad, Ramona Rose, The Silver Reserve and Trainer Trouble.

Tom said:
“To say this is the first event of its kind we’ve decided to put on, we can’t quite believe the quality of the musicians we’ve managed to secure! It really is just a ridiculous line-up.
“As with the previous annual open days we used to host back on our old site in Knaresborough, we’ll have Tony Safari spinning his ever eclectic collection of funky vinyl in The Sample Room throughout the day too.”
Suds With Buds will run from 2 to 8pm on Saturday, July 1. Tickets cost £25 and the price includes a souvenir Suds With Buds glass, as well as an event programme with full beer menu. The price of the tickets will also cover all of the associated costs of putting on the break-even event, including staffing, equipment, the provision of a wellness area, security, the musicians and additional facilities.
Find out more:
To secure your ticket for this unprecedented celebration of modern UK and US brewing and to sample some of the finest beers in the world, some of them never before served on this side of the Atlantic, just head to the Suds With Buds page of Rooster’s website.
Use code FERRET_10 at checkout and save 10%!
Business Breakfast: Harrogate brewery to host international beer festival
It’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. Our next networking event is lunch at Manahatta, on June 29th at 12.30pm.
Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate brewery is set to host 20 breweries as part of an international beer festival.
Roosters, which is based at Hornbeam Park, has announced the line up for the event which will be held on July 1.
The event will feature a combined line-up of over 100 beers from breweries including Burning Sky, Elusive, Brew York, North and Siren.
It will also see live music, with Sheffield’s Hot Soles are confirmed as the festival headliners, having previously supported The Zutons on tour. Ralph Pelleymounter will also take to the stage ahead of touring with Bastille later in July.
Called Suds With Buds, the festival will be held at Rooster’s tap room, beer garden and private function space upstairs at the brewery.
Tom Fozard, commercial director at Roosters, said:
“We’ve wanted to host Suds With Buds ever since we up scaled the brewery and opened the Taproom in 2019, so I’m excited that we’re finally in a position to make it happen.
“The list of breweries joining us and the beers they’ll be pouring is, quite frankly, ridiculous, but the quality of the street food traders and calibre of the live music on the day is equally impressive.
“Hopefully the weather will play its part and the sun will be shining for everyone who joins to enjoy a few suds with their buds on July 1.”
For more information on the event and to purchase tickets, visit the Roosters website here.
Business event to focus on staff retention
Three business groups are set to collaborate to host a series of events aimed at addressing critical challenges facing Harrogate firms.
2Inspire, Business Doctors and Light On Research will host the first event at West Park Hotel on June 6 from 9.30am, which will focus on attracting and retaining talent.
The series is designed to appeal to small, medium and larger sized businesses based in Harrogate and North Yorkshire the event will provide opportunities to network, collaborate, share ideas and hear from industry experts.
Ian Howard, of Business Doctors, said:
“We are delighted to be hosting these free events and look forward to meeting local businesses, understanding the challenges that they face and sharing ways for them to deliver a winning approach to attract and retain the talent they need to succeed in tough times.”
Sigita Russell, of Light On Research, added:
“Staff retention is not just a challenge, it’s an opportunity to create a workplace where employees thrive, achieve their potential, and feel proud to be part of something bigger than themselves.”
For more information on the event, visit the Eventbrite page here.
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‘Intimate gem’ Knaresborough pub wins rare award for beer quality
A pub in Knaresborough Market Place has been recognised for serving high quality real ale for three decades.
Blind Jack’s was awarded a certificate by the Campaign for Real Ale last night for 30 years’ continuous appearance in the Good Beer Guide.
The guide, produced annually by CAMRA, is the UK’s premier guide to the best beer in the country.
A total of 24 local pubs feature in the recently published 2023 edition. But it is not believed any can match Blind Jack’s record of being included every year in the last 30.
Christian Ogley and his wife Alice bought Blind Jack’s five years ago from Ian Fozard, the owner of Harrogate brewers Roosters.

Blind Jack’s on Market Place
Mr Ogley said only a handful of pubs in the country could match Blind Jack’s long-term record for consecutive appearances in the ale drinkers’ bible.
He said conditions in the 400-year-old building were ideal for maintaining ale at the right temperature and the pub also kept the quality high by ensuring a high turnover of live cask ales.
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Alun Gauld, chairman of the Harrogate and Ripon branch of CAMRA, presented a certificate to the owners last night. He said:
“Christian and Alice were overjoyed to have their hard work at the pub recognised by CAMRA and the certificate will join the other awards on the pub’s trophy display wall.
“In the pub’s first Good Beer Guide entry back in 1993 it was described as an intimate gem and it remains a gem to this day. “

The certificate presented last night
Mr Gauld said two other Harrogate district pubs had been in the Good Beer Guide regularly for many years — the White Bear in Masham and the One Eyed Rat in Ripon.
But he said he was only sure Blind Jack’s had been listed in the publication every year for the last three decades.
Henshaws Beer Festival back this weekend after two year breakHenshaws Beer Festival is back this weekend after a two year absence.
The event, on Saturday and Sunday, is a vital fundraiser for the Arts and Crafts Centre in Knaresborough which works with disabled adults from across the district.
In June 2020 Henshaws announced the centre would be closed for the “foreseeable future” . Almost a year later the charity received a grant from Arts Council England from the government’s £1.57 billion Culture Recovery Fund, which allowed the centre to reopen. Henshaws said it needs to raise £200,000 of non-statutory income a year to keep the centre running.
Henshaws said the beer festival will be bigger and better than ever. Five local breweries have joined forces to present the best of beer, including a specially brewed Henshaws Ale. Wines, gins, cider and low-alcohol beer will also be on offer.
The weekend will also feature sets from a range of local performers and a DJ . There will be a special acoustic stage on the Sunday.
There will be five different types of food and a range of family activities. Daytime family-friendly sessions take place on both days and there is an adults-only evening on the Saturday.
Fundraising development manager Helen Donkin said:
“Ticket sales are going well and we are beginning to get quite excited! The Arts and Crafts Centre offers a unique outdoor setting for the festival, with a large stage area, undercover spaces and outdoor and indoor seating. The event has been incredibly well supported in the past and, given the pressure that all charities are under, we hope for even more visitors this year. During our first event, we welcomed over 750 guests and pulled more than 2,500 pints and this year we want to do even better!
“We are already hugely grateful for the support of our sponsors including our title sponsor, Berwins Solicitors, and from the local breweries taking part, Cold Bath Brewery, Daleside, Harrogate Brewery, Turning Point and Roosters.”
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Martin Whincup, Head of marketing at Berwins, said:
“We’re delighted to be associated with this popular event as it returns from a pandemic enforced absence.
“This festival represents a fantastic opportunity to come together as a community and to raise money for a very important cause – Berwins is proud to support the work of Henshaws in this way.”
Tickets are available at Henshaws Beer Festival 2022 – Henshaws and each adult ticket receives a limited edition souvenir pint glass and two half-pint tokens, while children’s tickets come with a complementary soft drink voucher.
New chamber president ready to reinvigorate Harrogate business scene
The new president of a business organisation celebrating its 125th anniversary said she hopes her term will be an opportunity for progress.
Sue Kramer is set to begin her two-year term at the helm of Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce at its AGM tonight.
It will also mark the milestone anniversary with a celebration at Roosters taproom on Hornbeam Park, which Mrs Kramer said will be an opportunity to celebrate its long history.
Once the celebrations are over, Mrs Kramer is clear that her focus will be on the future. Her priorities include making more use of technology to keep businesses engaged and to canvas their views so they can be represented to local authorities.
“I’m looking forward to helping with working smart and being aware of moving with the times and keeping our finger on the pulse for everything.
“One thing I’m really aware of is that we have to bring about more sustainability. I want to embed sustainability into the chamber and its members. If we could all just do a little bit, it would help.”
Change can often be controversial in Harrogate – something Mrs Kramer, who runs a jewellery shop in the town centre with husband Stephen, knows only too well.
Proposals to reduce car use and encourage walking and cycling through changes in road layout, such as the £10.9m Station Gateway scheme, have drawn extensive criticism from retailers over recent months.
Plans to revamp Station Parade and James Street have proved controversial
Mrs Kramer said it was tricky to strike a balance between the importance of having more environmentally friendly measures and the need to support struggling town centre businesses. However, she said, there was nothing wrong with sharing views and debating the merits of proposals in order to ensure the right solution was reached.
“I think when these things occur, they have got to be looked at calmly and rationally and then come up with valid points for and against.
“It’s not one-size-fits-all. They are all very important and have to be viewed on their own merits.
“I don’t see the point of antagonising people. We have all got one common goal for the benefit of Harrogate.
“We should all work together. We may not always agree, but we can put that across diplomatically.”
For Mrs Kramer, working for the benefit of Harrogate comes naturally. She moved here as a child and attended local schools, as have her two children, now in their 20s.
Her early career was in recruitment and she ran an agency, with large national firms among its clients. Now, having run Crown Jewellers with her husband for more than two decades, she feels she can bring the perspectives of different businesses to her term as chamber president, with support from an active management committee representing a wide range of sectors.
Outgoing president Martin Gerrard, right, with chamber chief executive David Simister.
She is naturally a ‘do-er’: over the last few years, she has brought the shops on Commercial Street together to raise the area’s profile. She has persuaded the BID and Harrogate Borough Council to invest in improving the street too.
As the structure of local government changes over the coming year, Mrs Kramer says she will use her contacts and skills to ensure local businesses continue to have their voices heard.
“We will be building very strong relationships with North Yorkshire Council. Harrogate is going to need to step up and be very visible.
“We won’t be overlooked, but we have got to make sure we have got a strong voice.”
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Unlike pure networking groups, the chamber often has the ear of decision-makers – its upcoming programme includes a visit from the Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, and senior councillors and officers regularly share their plans with members at the monthly meetings.
As the difficulties of covid are gradually left behind, Mrs Kramer said there is a huge opportunity ahead for the 125-year-old chamber to evolve.
“It’s like spring: everything is shooting up and growing and coming back to life. It’s really exciting. Getting the members back to meetings is brilliant. We’ve got a good programme of meetings, relevant, informative and fun – we’re really moving forward.
“It’s a bit daunting [becoming president], but I’m really looking forward to it. Now we’re out of covid, there’s real scope to go a little bit further.”
