Does Guinness violate the Reinheitsgebot?
Does Guinness violate the Reinheitsgebot?
Just asking this to satisfy my curiosity, as I have statement from Guinness,
Q: I've seen Guinness sold in Germany even when the Reinheitsgebot applied to imported beers. How can that be?
A: In line with the German Purity Law, the barley is replaced with pale and roasted malt in Continental Europe." (MJBC p 181)
This comes from a Guinness FAQ, http://www.ivo.se/guinness/faq.html
I would have though yes, it would, but I am not sure. Any help on this matter would be greatly appreciated.
Q: I've seen Guinness sold in Germany even when the Reinheitsgebot applied to imported beers. How can that be?
A: In line with the German Purity Law, the barley is replaced with pale and roasted malt in Continental Europe." (MJBC p 181)
This comes from a Guinness FAQ, http://www.ivo.se/guinness/faq.html
I would have though yes, it would, but I am not sure. Any help on this matter would be greatly appreciated.
Guinness as it's supplied elsewhere doesn't meet the Reinheitsgebot as I think all barley in a beer has to be malted and neither flaked nor roasted barley are. Replacing roasted barley with a roasted malt isn't a big deal (the malt would cost a fraction more) but the flaked barley replacement probably affects the mouthfeel a bit.
"don't give him your name Pike!"
Sorry couldn't resist.
Re: EU laws and the UK
what happens is 10-20 pages arrive from the EU relating to a directive, and then Whitehall garnishes upto a 1000 pages and then passes it off as a EU dictact. What this provides for the UK government is deniebility "its not us, its those pesky buggers in brussels!"
The EU desperatly requires reform, but it is not always the instigator of rubbish laws.
could go on and on and on, but I shall resist

Sorry couldn't resist.
Re: EU laws and the UK
what happens is 10-20 pages arrive from the EU relating to a directive, and then Whitehall garnishes upto a 1000 pages and then passes it off as a EU dictact. What this provides for the UK government is deniebility "its not us, its those pesky buggers in brussels!"
The EU desperatly requires reform, but it is not always the instigator of rubbish laws.
could go on and on and on, but I shall resist

- crow_flies
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Read this its very interesting.... basically he is saying that it's how the beer is made that is important and not just what's in it; and interestingly claims it was originally intended to stop good quality ingredients being used for beer, rather than bread.....
http://www.xs4all.nl/~patto1ro/reinheit.htm
/CF
http://www.xs4all.nl/~patto1ro/reinheit.htm
/CF
Drinking:Bottled Hobgoblin clone
Drinking:Bottled Black sheep clone
Drinking:Casked Amarillo ale
In the FV: nought
Drinking:Bottled Black sheep clone
Drinking:Casked Amarillo ale
In the FV: nought
That's a very good link.crow_flies wrote:Read this its very interesting.... basically he is saying that it's how the beer is made that is important and not just what's in it; and interestingly claims it was originally intended to stop good quality ingredients being used for beer, rather than bread.....
http://www.xs4all.nl/~patto1ro/reinheit.htm
/CF
I often though that the R-gebot was just protectionism, and also allows the Germans to bang on about 'purity', trying to make us think that 'pure' must be therefore mean 'better'. It is patent bollocks particularly as the Germans get around it anyway when it suits them.