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Paul Hogan is an Australian actor, writer and film producer. He was born in 1939 at Lightning Ridge, New South Wales. First popular in the UK for his comic role in the Foster's lager television commercials, he became famous for his role as 'Crocodile Dundee' in the 1986 film of the same name.
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Sheridan Smith is an English actress. She was born in 1981 at Epworth, Lincolnshire. She is best known for her role as 'Janet' in the television comedy series 'Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps'.
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Ice Cold In Alex is a Second World War drama starring John Mills, Sylvia Syms, Anthony Quayle and Harry Andrews in a story based on the novel by Christopher Landon about a small party of British soldiers and a nurse taking a hazardous journey across the desert to Alexandria. Ice Cold In Alex - referring to the lager beer - did much to publicise lager to the British public. Ice Cold In Alex was directed by J Lee Thompson in 1958.
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Black Beer is a strong-tasting bitter-chocolate lager brewed in Germany. In Yorkshire, Black Beers are treacly malt extracts bottled for mixing with lemonade to produce distinctive shandies.
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Brewing is the process of extracting a saccharine solution from malted grain and converting the solution into a fermented and sound alcoholic beverage called ale or beer.
The preliminary process of malting (often a distinct business to that of brewing) consists in promoting the germination of the grain for the sake of the saccharine matter into which the starch of the seed is thus converted. The barley or other grain is steeped for about two days in a cistern and then piled in a heap, or couch, which is turned and re-turned until the radicle or root, and acrospire or rudimentary stem, have uniformly developed to some little extent in all the heap of grain. This treatment lasts from seven to ten days, by which time the grain has acquired a sweet taste; the life of the grain being then destroyed by spreading the whole upon the floor of a kiln to be thoroughly dried.
At this point begins the brewing process proper, which in breweries is generally as follows: The malt is crushed or roughly ground in a malt-mill, whence it is carried to the mashing-machine, and there thoroughly mixed with hot water. The mixture is now received by the mash-tun - a cylindrical vessel with a false perforated bottom held about an inch from the true one. In the mash-tun the useful elements are extracted from the malt in the form of the sweet liquor known as wort, and the tun, therefore, is fitted with an elaborate system of revolving rakes for thoroughly mixing the malt with hot water.
The mixing completed, the mash-tun is covered up and allowed to stand for about three hours, when the taps in the true bottom are opened and the wort or malt-extract run off. The wort being drained into a copper the hops are now added, and the whole boiled for about two hours, the boiling, like the addition of hops, tending to prevent acetous and putrefactive fermentation. When sufficiently boiled the contents of the copper are run into the hop-back - a long, rectangular vessel with a false bottom about 20 cm from the true bottom. The hot wort leaving the spent hops in the hop-back runs through the perforations in the false bottom and thence into the cooler - a large flat vessel where the worts are cooled to about 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
From the cooler the liquor is admitted to the refrigerator - a shallow rectangular vessel, which reduces the temperature to almost that of the cold water, or about 58 degrees. The worts are next led by pipes into the large wooden fermenting buns, where yeast or barm is added as soon as the wort begins to run in from the refrigerator. During the operation of fermentation, by which a portion of the saccharine matter is converted into alcohol, the temperature rises considerably, and requires to be kept in check by means of a coil of copper piping with cold water running through it lowered into the beer. When the fermentation has gone far enough, and the liquor has been allowed to settle, the beer becomes comparatively clear and bright, and may be run off and filled into the trade casks or into vats.
The various beers manufactured from grain have sometimes been classified under the three heads of beer (including lager), ale, and porter; but at the present day this classification will not hold, as beer, though it occasionally may have a specific meaning, is often used as the general name for all malt liquors. Both terms belong to the early or Anglo-Saxon period of the English language, but in more modern times the term beer seems to have been applied more especially to malt liquor flavoured with hops, wormwood, or other bitters.
Ale was originally made from barley malt and yeast alone, and the use of hops was first introduced in Germany, which has longe been a great brewing country. One of the kinds of German beer widely known and consumed since about 1900 is lager beer - that is, store beer, the name being given to it because it is usually kept for four to six months (at a low temperature) before being used. In brewing it the fermentation is made to go on rather slowly and at a low temperature. Much lager beer is now made in America. Among the most celebrated beers are the English pale ales brewed at Burton-on-Trent. The excellence of the Burton ale depends partly on the water used, which is all drawn from wells, and contains carbonates and sulphates of lime and magnesia in large quantities, and partly on the method of brewing.
The English bitter beer traditionally made for home consumption was less bitter than that which was sent abroad, at least as brewed by the best brewers; but a good part of the beer sold under this name is of poor quality and would have little flavour were it not for the hops. Porter, now more often known as stout, which was formerly very largely made in London, as also in Dublin, is of a very dark colour, this colour being obtained by the use of a certain proportion of malt subjected to a heat sufficient to scorch or blacken it.
The manufacture of ale or beer is of very high antiquity. Herodotus ascribes the invention of brewing to Isis, and it was certainly practised in Egypt. Xenophon mentions it as being used in Armenia, and the Gauls were early acquainted with it. Pliny mentions an intoxicating liquor made of corn and water as common to all the nations of the west of Europe, and in England ale-booths were regulated by law as early as the 8th century. A rude process of brewing is carried on by many uncivilized races; thus chica or maize beer is made by the South American Indians, millet beer by various African tribes, etc.
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Broken Hill Draught is a dry, malty Australian lager from the South Australian brewery of Adelaide, this beer is named after the famous mining town. It is one of Australia's truly regional brews and has been produced for the 'Silver City' and surrounding areas for nearly 80 years. It is only available in kegs in the Broken Hill area.
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Carbine Stout is an Australian dark beer brewed by Castlemaine from Brisbane since 1925. Despite the name, it is a bottom-fermented lager with a roasted-malt flavour.
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Carling (formerly Carling Black Label) is a Canadian lager by Molson, now brewed in Britain and one of Britain's most popular beers. Carling is a typical, modern, industrial lager - bland, sweet and fizzy and served very cold. Carling Black Label was first introduced to Britain in 1953, and was adopted by the Burton-on-Trent brewing company Bass as it's primary lager brand.
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Castlemaine XXXX is an Australia lager. It uses whole hops rather than pellets or hop extracts.
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Castlemaine XXXX is an Australia lager. It uses whole hops rather than pellets or hop extracts.
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The Probert Encyclopaedia was designed, edited and programed by
Matt and Leela Probert
©1993 - 2009 The Probert Encyclopaedia
Southampton, United Kingdom
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