The Evening Standard is celebrating Truman beer returning to the East End. Here’s what they say.

“Truman beer has made a comeback in the East End after not producing a drop for more than two decades.
Ale enthusiasts James Morgan and Michael-George Hemus acquired the Truman brand and have made its first product since the original Brick Lane brewery closed in 1989.
They enlisted the help of the award-winning Nethergate Brewery to produce Truman’s Runner. Now they hope to open their own commercial brewhouse. The 30-year-old entrepreneurs, who work in Brick Lane, were inspired to take on the project after walking past the derelict site every day.
Mr Morgan said: “We’ve spent the last 10 years in that area and it’s always been this big hole. It seemed a crying shame. This was the capital of the world for brewing at one point. Truman was the world’s biggest brewer in the 1870s.”
Established in 1666, the site closed in 1989 due to competition from continental-style lagers. The pair acquired the Truman name this year and spent hours searching archives for old recipes.
Planning rules mean they cannot use the Brick Lane site, and they are seeking a new east London location. Mr Morgan said: “Our dream is to bring Truman’s back to the people it belongs to.”
Truman’s Runner is served in the Scolt Head, N1; Griffin, Lennard Street, EC2; Carpenter’s Arms, Cheshire Street, E2; Water Poet, E1; Pub in the Park, E8; and Barnsbury, Liverpool Road, N1″
Read more at The Evening Standard Online