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Ice beer was developed by brewing a strong, dark lager, then freezing the beer and removing some of the ice. This concentrates the aroma and taste of the beer, and also raises the alcoholic strength of the finished beer. [3] This produces a beer with 12 to 15 per cent alcohol. In North America, water would be added to lower the alcohol level.
Some U.S. grocery stores, convenience stores, bars and restaurants have growler filling stations. [2] [3] [4] A crowler (portmanteau of "canned growler") is a fillable and machine-sealable beer can. [5] The selected beer is poured into the can body and then a pop-top is sealed over it at a canning station.
Fruit beer generally has an alcohol percentage of around 4-8%, best served cold. Elderberry juice is mentioned as an ingredient in some old porter recipes. [5] [6] The juice probably served as colouring agent. In England, elderberry beer (also called ebulum) was made by boiling elderberries in the first and strongest wort.
Alamy Consider the growler -- those large bottles that beer drinkers use to take microbrews home straight from the tap. The name for the container, which typically holds 64 ounces, dates back to ...
A growler filler was installed during the renovation that allows any of 20 draft beers to be routed to the counter-pressure growler filler. This device includes a CO 2 evacuation step, increasing the shelf life of the beer compared to direct spigot filling. The growlers are 68 US fluid ounces (0.53 US gal; 2.0 L). [5]
National Bohemian Beer, colloquially Natty Boh, is an American lager [2] originating from Baltimore, Maryland. It was first brewed in 1885 by the National Brewing Company , but was eventually purchased by Pabst Brewing Company .
Old or unsold beer was frequently made into Bierbrand or Bierlikör, both of which have a longer shelf life. A reference book from 1900 mentions a "Bier-Essenz", which is combined with neutral grain alcohol and sugar to produce a Bier-Likör. [1] The rising popularity of craft beer in the 2010s in Germany has seen a revival of Bierlikör. [2]
Trejo’s recipes typically use “super fresh” juices from season fruit, but he admits that there’s “nothing like” using frozen limeade concentrate to get a margarita’s texture and ...