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Guinness Mid-Strength, a low-alcohol stout test-marketed in Limerick, Ireland in March 2006 [63] and Dublin from May 2007: [64] 2.8% ABV. Guinness Red, brewed in exactly the same way as Guinness except that the barley is only lightly roasted so that it produces a lighter, slightly fruitier red ale; test-marketed in Britain in February 2007: 4 ...
Guinness Extra Smooth, a smoother stout sold in Ghana, Cameroon and Nigeria: 5.5% ABV. Malta Guinness, a non-alcoholic sweet drink, produced in Nigeria and exported to the UK and Malaysia. Guinness Mid-Strength, a low-alcohol stout test-marketed in Limerick, Ireland in March 2006 [25] and Dublin from May 2007: [26] 2.8% ABV.
Guinness Flavour Extract, a dehydrated, hopped wort extract made from barley malt and roasted barley, is used for overseas production of the stout. [9] The syrup is shipped from Ireland, where it is added at the ratio of 1:49 to locally brewed pale beer. [9] Each year, six million litres of GFE are made using 9,000 tonnes of barley. [25]
Arthur Guinness (c. 24 September 1725 – 23 January 1803) was an Irish brewer, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. The inventor of Guinness beer, he founded the Guinness Brewery at St. James's Gate in 1759. Guinness was born in Ardclogh, near Celbridge, County Kildare, in 1725.
With the beginning of March comes everyone's favorite excuse to toss back a few — Saint Patrick's Day. And while some may think that green-colored beer is the only way to enjoy a cold one this ...
Porter was first brewed in Ireland in 1776, and although Arthur Guinness did not start brewing until 1787, he had phased out all other types of beer from his Guinness Brewery by 1799. [29] [30] Beamish and Crawford and Murphy's Brewery, both in Cork followed suit and abandoned ales in favour of porter.
The world's tallest man, as confirmed by the Guinness Book of Records, is Robert Pershing Wadlow, who was born in 1918 in Alton, Ill. Standing at a colossal 8'11.1″ (2.72 m) and weighing in at ...
The Big Apple is home to an eye-popping 436 Guinness World Record holders, nearly 8% of all the risk-takers in the country and second only to California’s 615, according to the 70th edition of ...