Not all of us require a decent head. It’s a myth that only Yorkshire can brew good beer.Northern British drinkers demand a decent head, the only limitation is getting full measure. That's not a problem when it is your own beer and you don't have to pay full price for the head.
But a fact they brew among the best.It’s a myth that only Yorkshire can brew good beer.
But so do all regions of the UK.But a fact they brew among the best.
Change your name to Eric the TykeIf it ain't from Yorkshire it's *****.
Like @Brewskey , relegated to 12 oz. pours for now though I plan on using 22 oz. "bombers" for the long-aged 1848 RIS and vintage IPA I'm doing coming up. As lame as it is....just can't bring myself to pour an English bitter in a standard, insipid, straight-walled 12 oz. glass.Northern British drinkers demand a decent head, the only limitation is getting full measure. That's not a problem when it is your own beer and you don't have to pay full price for the head.
Nice, man! Doubly so, using your own landrace hops!Heres my current bitter on tap. I might have mentioned in this thread I've started to grow some hops, and this is a beer brewed using homegrown hops for late boil and dry hops.
All 3 plants are old, domestic heritage/landrace varieties.
The one used in this one is called "Gamla Källmon"(most names are given after the place they are found). Gives a prominent , spicy, herbal/grassy aroma/flavour, reminiscent of Japanese green tea.
On it's own it's a bit too strong, but is probably very nice in a 50/50 mix with Goldings.
View attachment 838841
I have kegs too, but I tend to bottle most of the English recipes I brew.Like @Brewskey , relegated to 12 oz. pours for now though I plan on using 22 oz. "bombers" for the long-aged 1848 RIS and vintage IPA I'm doing coming up. As lame as it is....just can't bring myself to pour an English bitter in a standard, insipid, straight-walled 12 oz. glass.![]()
Looks good.Heres my current bitter on tap. I might have mentioned in this thread I've started to grow some hops, and this is a beer brewed using homegrown hops for late boil and dry hops.
All 3 plants are old, domestic heritage/landrace varieties.
The one used in this one is called "Gamla Källmon"(most names are given after the place they are found). Gives a prominent , spicy, herbal/grassy aroma/flavour, reminiscent of Japanese green tea.
On it's own it's a bit too strong, but is probably very nice in a 50/50 mix with Goldings.
View attachment 838841
Sadly, no.Are the “pint” glasses in the US the same size as in the UK? Ours are 20 fluid oz (568 ml).
That 568ml is to the pint line marked on the glass. In Yorkshire, and some other places, you’ll find oversized pint glasses, leaving enough room for a head plus the beer you paid for. Why most Southerners and others don’t appreciate good head, presumably.Are the “pint” glasses in the US the same size as in the UK? Ours are 20 fluid oz (568 ml).
Still Yorkshire yeast, though.You don't need a good head on a pint of Harveys Sussex.
Just finished watching Ted Lasso for the first time. And yes, I noticed. Richmond, SW London.That 568ml is to the pint line marked on the glass. In Yorkshire, and some other places, you’ll find oversized pint glasses, leaving enough room for a head plus the beer you paid for. Why most Southerners and others don’t appreciate good head, presumably.
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I’m about as Southerner as you can get, but I do like good head.Who are the Southerners?
Harald Hardrada tried to become a tyke, didn't work out so well for him. My dad once had a job that involved going to the farm where the Battle of Stamford Bridge took place, there's still a hillock which is meant to be where the Vikings ended up....Change your name to Eric the Tyke![]()
But US floz are slightly different to British floz, which is why you get all those weird 19.2 US floz cans in US supermarkets, they're actually imperial pint cans from Britain (and funnily are far more common in the US than UK)16oz is a standard US pint
So you buy your beer in 568mls then....Strange how the US had a dollar worth 100 cents early in its history ( the UK went monetary metric as late as 1971) but stuck with Imperial UOM. I was brought up on £sd, miles, furlongs, chains, hundredweight, stones, pounds and ozs. Yards, feet, and inches. In Engineering we had thou’s , tenths, BTU’s. But most of this confusion was swept away thank heavens. I still think distance in miles but for the rest good old metric.![]()