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Named for a strip of poor soil on a 200-acre farm, Poverty Knob Farmhouse Ales opens at Port Farms in Waterford. The brewery, which cost $1 million to build, is open year-round.
Farmhouse ale is an ancient European tradition where farmers brewed beer for consumption on the farm from their own grain. Most farmers would brew for Christmas and/or late summer work, but in areas where they had enough grain farmers would use beer as the everyday drink.
The brewery uses a saison yeast instead of the traditional baker’s yeast. Though the beer-making process may look different, the resulting brew is complex and delicious, with all the sahti notes ...
The New Glarus Brewing Company is an American brewery founded in 1993. Located in New Glarus, Wisconsin, it is an independently owned craft brewery, whose products can only be found in Wisconsin. New Glarus Brewing Company is the 15th largest craft brewer and 25th largest overall brewing company in the United States, by sales volume. [1]
The brewery occupies a stone farmhouse on the main road through the village of Soy in the Marche-en-Famenne district of Luxembourg province. [2]Founded in 1988, Brasserie Fantôme has gained international attention and a cult following among lovers of craft beers.
Miles, The Prince, which opens Nov. 18 in North White Plains, offers two kinds of experiences: A 43-seat fine dining restaurant serving a seasonal, seven-course New American tasting menu on one ...
There is a wedding in Hardanger and local farmhouse ale is filled in a traditional drinking bowl. Photo:National Archives of Norway, 1954. Beer in Norway has a long history, stretching back more than a millennium. Until some 200 years ago, most farms where it was possible to grow grain south of the Arctic Circle, brewed their own beer. From the ...
Lammin Sahti, a Finnish sahti brand. Sahti is a Finnish type of farmhouse ale made from malted and unmalted grains including barley and rye.Traditionally the beer is flavored with juniper in addition to, or instead of, hops; [1] the mash is filtered through juniper twigs into a trough-shaped tun, called a kuurna in Finnish.