Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Burton ale is a type of strong ale which is dark and sweet. [1] [2] It is named after the brewing town of Burton-on-Trent.[3] [4] [5]Burton ales were generally aged and needed cellaring for months before serving, and almost certainly had some degree of secondary fermentation going on during that time. [6]
On November 16, 2015, Pabst announced that it would be reviving Ballantine Burton Ale for the 2015 holiday season. This new version was reverse engineered by Pabst brewmaster Greg Deuhs as was Ballantine IPA from 2014. This barleywine style ale has 11.3% ABV, 75 IBUs, and a starting gravity of 26.5 Plato.
Typically, these barrels once housed wine, rum, whiskey, bourbon, tequila, and other wines and spirits. Beers are sometimes aged in barrels to achieve a variety of effects in the final product. Sour beers such as lambics are fully fermented in wood (usually oak) barrels similar to those used to ferment wine, usually including microflora other ...
The restaurant, Hiser said, will feature a bar and a dining room separated by a large wine room that stocks more than 500 bottles and is enclosed by floor-to-ceiling glass.
An unopened bottle of Ansells Silver Jubilee Strong Ale from 1977. Strong ale is a type of ale, usually above 5% abv and often higher, between 7 and 11% abv, which spans a number of beer styles, including old ale, barley wine, and Burton ale.
Barton Brands of Kentucky logo. Barton Brands, Ltd. was a company that produced a variety of distilled beverages and liqueurs and is now part of the Sazerac Company, which is headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, and has its principal offices in Louisville, Kentucky.
Offering fine cigars, top-shelf liquors and chef-driven dishes, an upscale cigar lounge is now open in downtown Macon. Chuchills on Cherry is owned by Bruce Riggins and his son, Nicholas “Nick ...
Typically, these barrels once housed bourbon, whisky, wine, or, to a lesser extent, brandy, sherry, or port. [1] [2] There is a particular tradition of barrel ageing beer in Belgium, notably of lambic beers. [3] The first bourbon barrel-aged beers were produced in the United States in the early 1990s. [4]