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The building was dismantled and moved in 2011 after it was bought by an anonymous Edmonton family. [4] Molson closed the brewery in August 2007 due to an ongoing worker's strike, the shift in consumer preferences from bottled to canned beer and the company's loss of a contract to brew the Foster's Group brand. As a result of the closure, 136 ...
Fast-food chains, always eager to please, release new fish sandwiches and other seafood items right before Lent to cater to the seasonal trend. (Of course, there's no shortage of year-round fish ...
Since then, the event has won the City of Edmonton's local magazine Vue Weekly's Golden Fork Awards for best Beverage Festival in both 2014 [8] and 2015. [9] Beerfest then received runner up in the same category in 2016, [ 10 ] 2017, [ 11 ] and 2018.
Originally Dunn Brewery, renamed William Dow & Co. on death of Thomas Dunn. Combines with Williams to become National Breweries in 1909. [3] The National Breweries Ltd. building was constructed in 1919 with additions in 1924. [4] Acquired by Canadian Breweries in 1952, brands discontinued in 1997: F&M Brewery: Ontario: Guelph: 1995: Closed in 2018
Labatt 50 is fermented using a special ale yeast, in use at Labatt since 1933. Labatt Blue is a 5% abv pale lager. [17] There are 12 imperial fluid ounces (341 mL) of beer in a bottle of Labatt Blue. There are 355 mL of beer in a standard can of Labatt Blue/Bleue in Canada with other volumes available in specific regions of the country.
The original Sleeman Breweries was established in the 1850s and operated until it lost its licence due to smuggling and tax evasion, for 50 years, in 1933. [3] John W. Sleeman re-established the brewery in the 1980s using the original company recipes. In 2006, Sleeman Breweries was purchased by Sapporo Brewery for CA$400 million. [4]
Lonely Planet named the top 10 best cities to travel to in 2025. Popular cities like Osaka, Japan, and Genoa, Italy, made the list. It also includes lesser-known cities like Pondicherry, India ...
OPA! is a fast food chain that started with a single food court location in Calgary's Market Mall, where they served Greek dishes. Since 2001, OPA! has grown from a single restaurant to a chain with over 100 locations across Canada, including three university locations; the University of Calgary, the University of Alberta, and MacEwan's SAMU ...