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Bottled beer only started to be a thing in the 19th century. However, brewers soon realised UV rays from the sun proved problematic for beer in a clear glass.
That changed and much of the credit is given to Jester King in Austin, Texas, when in 2016, they began packaging some of their mainstay beers in green glass bottles for sale in their tasting room.
You've probably noticed the glass bottles used for beer are often brown or green glass. That's thanks to a chemical reaction no beer lover likes: skunking.
When bottled beer first became a thing in the 19th century, beer was stored in clear glass bottles. However when the sun shone on these bottles, the beer would begin to smell bad.
Plastic Beer Bottles with Barrier Coatings Coating technologies can be broadly divided into two categories, those that use vacuum or plasma routes to deposit very thin films of materials, such as ...
Select bottles of Corona Extra, the best-selling imported beer in the United States, have just been recalled. Constellation Brands, the company that owns Corona Extra, issued a voluntary recall of ...
However, the enamels were of greater concern, with cadmium concentrations of up to 20,000 parts per million in the decorated regions on a range of spirits, beer and wine bottles, and lead ...
That changed and much of the credit is given to Jester King in Austin, Texas, when in 2016, they began packaging some of their mainstay beers in green glass bottles for sale in their tasting room.
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