enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of beer styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_beer_styles

    Beer style is a term used to differentiate and categorize beers by various factors, including appearance, flavour, ingredients, production method, history, or origin. The term beer style and the structuring of world beers into defined categories is largely based on work done by writer Michael James Jackson in his 1977 book The World Guide To ...

  3. Invercargill Brewery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invercargill_Brewery

    This pilsner beer has the distinctive flavour of the new varietals developed by the New Zealand Hop Board, originally known as b-saaz and d-saaz, later marketed as Motueka and Riwaka. Also in 2007, Invercargill launched New Zealand's first commercial Manuka smoked beer - Smokin' Bishop. It won a medal at the New Zealand Beer Awards that year.

  4. Speight's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speight's

    Speight's is a beer brand and a brewery located in Dunedin, New Zealand. The brand is owned by the Japanese-controlled holding company Lion , itself a subsidiary of Kirin . Speight's is best known for its Gold Medal Ale, one of the best-selling beers in New Zealand.

  5. Monteith's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monteith's

    Radler is a style of beer, in the same way that Pilsner or Stout are. However, DB has trademarked the term "Radler" since 2001. [2] [3] The Society of Beer Advocates asked the Intellectual Property Office of New Zealand (IPoNZ) for the brewery's Radler trademark to be revoked.

  6. Emerson's Brewery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerson's_Brewery

    Emerson’s beers are not pasteurised like most mainstream New Zealand beers. The yeast is left alive in the beer to mature and enhance the flavour of the beer. Emerson’s ales are produced from malted barley, hops, yeast and water. They do not have preservatives, added sugar, artificial colouring, have not been pasteurised and some are not ...

  7. Beer in New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_in_New_Zealand

    Epic pale ale Beer is the most popular alcoholic drink in New Zealand, accounting for 63% of available alcohol for sale. At around 64.7 litres per person per annum, New Zealand is ranked 27th in global beer consumption per capita. The vast majority of beer produced in New Zealand is a type of lager, either pale or amber in colour, and typically 4–5% alcohol by volume. Although the two ...

  8. Pilsner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilsner

    Pilsner Urquell, the world's first pale lager and ancestor of today's Pilsners. Pilsner (also pilsener or simply pils) is a type of pale lager.It takes its name from the Bohemian city of Plzeƈ (German: Pilsen), where the world's first pale lager (now known as Pilsner Urquell) was produced in 1842 by Pilsner Urquell Brewery.

  9. List of beer and breweries by region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_beer_and_breweries...

    Beer has been brewed by Armenians since ancient times. One of the first confirmed written evidences of ancient beer production is Xenophon's reference to "wine made from barley" in one of the ancient Armenia villages, as described in his 5th century B.C. work Anabasis: "There were stores within of wheat and barley and vegetables, and wine made from barley in great big bowls; the grains of ...