See, there are these two bars in Rochester: Monty’s Krown and Monty’s Korner. They’re good bars, with friendly staff and an awareness of good beer. I’m friends with the ‘tenders and the managers. Bruce and I will even be restarting Beer School at the Korner within a couple of weeks.
That said, the Monty’s bars are pulling a jack move, and I gotta call ‘em out on it.]
It was an axiom at the Krown and the Korner. Irish stout, such as Gunness or Murphys, was served in a 20 ounce Imperial pint. Just like in Ireland. A nice, weighty pint in your hand on a cold night is a wonderful thing, and Monty’s used to deliver.
Now, they’ve substituted in a glass that looks exactly like an Imperial pint, with its flares and curves, except for one minor detail: It’s four ounces smaller. No, dear reader, the price has not changed, but your drink shrank. Monty’s is getting 24 more imperial pints worth of saleable beer per keg, and you don’t save a dime on your considerably smaller beer.
It’s a fucking rip-off. And it doesn’t have to be.
Now before I get angry calls from you, Jen Clark, hear me out. Monty’s has been more than good to its regular patrons over the years, and this post is not meant to sound ungrateful. Times have definitely gotten tough, and places like the Krown need to buckle down, maybe track their bottom line with a bit more vigor. That’s totally understandable. But sneaking a smaller pint onto the shelf isn’t the way to do it. People feel cheated. They grumble. It’s an affront to the intelligence as well as the liver.
Just raise the damn price and keep the pint glass the same. Drinkers know that times are tough for small business owners too, not just for the customers. I, for one, would have been happy to pay an extra buck for my 20 oz Murphy’s instead of cradling the new “pint”, wondering if I had a growth spurt.
Monty’s is by no means the only bar to do this (for example, the “Little Paul” pints at the Tap and Mallet). But it’s a shame when penny-pinching hits that close to a longtime home.
-Mark
-Mark







