Business

Jeremy Clarkson warns some bottles of his Hawkstone Cider are at risk of exploding

Jeremy Clarkson has warned some bottles of his Hawkstone Cider might explode.

The former Top Gear presenter, who owns the craft drink brand, warned there had been a “massive cock-up” in a sweary Twitter update.

He wrote: “If the cap has the code L3160, open it underwater, pour it away and get in touch for a refund.”

Pic: Hawkstone
Image:
Only bottles with the code ‘L3160’ on the cap are said to be affected. Pic: Hawkstone

Clarkson stressed that Hawkstone Beer is “fine and still delicious” – and “almost all” cider bottles are unaffected.

On Instagram, Hawkstone explained that “a small amount” of cider had over-fermented.

“Take a photo of the caps and we will send you a fresh batch or a refund,” the company added.

The drinks brand was launched in 2021, with its primary ingredients coming directly from Clarkson’s Diddly Squat farm in Chipping Norton.

More on Jeremy Clarkson

His attempt to run a farm has now been turned into an Amazon Prime TV show.

Undated handout photo issued by Blackball Media showing Jeremy Clarkson raffling water outside The Squat Shop, on his farm, Diddly Squat, near Chipping Norton in the Cotswolds which he is running as part of an Amazon Prime show called I Bought A Farm. Pic: Blackball Media
Image:
Jeremy Clarkson has opened a farm show on his Diddly Squat farm. Pic: Blackball Media

Clarkson, who purchased the farm in 2008 and started running it himself in 2019, got a frosty reaction from some villagers when he sought to expand the business with a farm shop and restaurant.

Clarkson also presents Amazon Prime TV series The Grand Tour with his former Top Gear co-stars Richard Hammond and James May.

Articles You May Like

U.S. crude oil edges higher but closes below $69 as large surplus expected next year
Parachute OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch Tamil Drama Movie Online?
NASA Partners with Microsoft For Earth Copilot AI to Simplify Access to Complex Earth Data
Biden allows Kyiv to begin firing US rockets deep into Russia – as politician warns it ‘risks World War Three’
Social media bosses could face £10,000 fine for failing to remove knife adverts