MARSHFIELD RED



BALANCED FRUITINESS, RUGGED BITTERNESS, HOPPY

4.6% ABV

Marshfield Red is a complex hoppy red ale. The ruby red colour comes from the caramel malt. Selected hops from the US and New Zealand provides a restrained bitterness, with a floral, citrus and fresh crushed gooseberry bursting from the glass.

 GREAT WITH 

Roasted Welsh lamb
and
Fresh mozzarella

HOPS & MALTS

Cascade, Amarillo

Pale ale malt, Carmalt, Munich malt, Light Crystal malt, Medium crystal malt and Roasted barley

COMES IN

500ml Bottles
Minikegs
Cask
Keg

IN THE SHOP

INDIVIDUAL BOTTLES

£2.70

CASE OF 12

£32

MIXED CASE

£31

DON’T TAKE OUR WORD FOR IT

 

“Full flavoured red ale hoppy with more than a hint of caramel. Underrated.”

4 out of 5 - Untapped

“A very underrated style. Malty and well balanced, traditional but well crafted.”

4 out of 5 - Untapped

 

“Nice nutty and citrus notes with a malty backbone. Great stuff.”

4.25 out of 5 - Untapped

“Ooooh… now this is something interesting. Piney and a touch of citrus with a hefty malt character. A little gose funk too. A great red.”

4 out of 5 - Untapped

MARSHFIELD TINPLATE WORKS 

Marshfield Works fired up its furnaces in 1863 the opposite side of the Old Lodge works on Station Road. It was built to produce sheet iron for sale to tinplate works in south Wales and to works in Birmingham. The names Marshfield and Lakefield are reminders of how wet this low-lying pasture land once was.

In 1868 Marshfield Works added a tinplate making department to use some of the iron sheets it produced. Both works experienced problems in the economic depression of the 1870s. Old Lodge Works closed in 1876 and when Marshfield Works changed ownership in 1879 it was renamed the Western Works. Two attempts in the 1880s to reopen Old Lodge Works failed within a short time. Finally, the works was converted into a tinplate works in 1889.

For fifty years, visitors to Llanelli arriving by train travelled up Station Road, flanked by these two tinplate works. Locomotives shunted wagons of steel bars and vans of tinplate across the road and from the pavement a glimpse could be seen of the rolling mills. Visitors knew they had arrived in Tinopolis!

Over seventy old tinplate works across south Wales closed when strip mills and electrolytic tinning arrived in Britain from the USA. Marshfield works closed in 1953 when Trostre opened.

Marshfield works was redeveloped for housing in the 1950s and today one would never guess that Station Road was once a centre of the tinplate industry were it not for a couple of commemorative blue plaques.