News

A creamy cap of beer foam, often called the “head,” isn’t just for looks. It carries concentrated aromatics, helps to preserve carbonation, and affects how the beer tastes. Here's the surprising ...
Every U.S. state has breweries producing excellent beer. From a Snake Handler to a Smoked Porter, get ready to salivate over ...
Darling Brew announced it has launched Reminisce, a limited-edition 5-year-old malt whisky distilled entirely from beer, and the first of its kind in South Africa.
The stucco exterior with brick accents gives off strong “we-know-what-we’re-doing” vibes, while the iconic griffin logo serves as a guardian to the liquid treasures within. Walking up to the entrance, ...
Darling Brew - one of South Africa’s most awarded and forward-thinking craft breweries, and Africa’s first carbon-neutral brewery – has once again broken new ground. This time, not with a beer, but ...
Chappell - Tomorrow's Problem: The "Imperial Amber" isn't a recognized beer style—at least, not until enough breweries are enthusiastic enough to make it one. When faced with such a creation, the best ...
Patrick Lam has spent the past 25 years rolling foil from beer bottles into his famous ‘beer ball’. (Muhammad Rabbani Jamian @ FMT Lifestyle) His children said he was crazy. Others shot ...
The stubby, a Canadian beer bottle that was once a fixture in fridges from coast to coast, is now being reinterpreted as a subtle form of economic self-defence as trade tensions with the U.S. heat up.
Forty years after its retirement as the industry standard bottle for beer in Canada, the stubby is being reinterpreted in an age marred by tariffs and American grievance — not as a cultural icon, but ...
A viral video features a mother using an empty beer bottle as a rolling pin to make parathas. Instagram users have applauded her creative solution.
Glass bottles contain up to 50 times more microplastics than plastic bottles Beer bottles had the highest microplastic count, averaging 60 particles per litre Microplastics in glass bottles mainly ...
Scientists fom the French food safety agency, ANSES, have discovered that drinks sold in glass bottles - including water, beer, and wine - contain more microplastics than those in plastic bottles.