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I'm hoping those kegs get a chance to 'calm down' before they get tapped... :-)
Now I know why it takes Guinness so looong to settle :)
I wonder how long those kegs last that way.
In London and Germany, I noticed that they refill the pubs using a hose from the beer truck. This must be a Low volume pub.--Hale
That's an old trick for unloading beer kegs. I remember when I was a kid in New York in the 1940's watching the drivers use a thick rubber pad to bounce the keg off the truck before rolling the keg into the tavern.
I kept expecting an Italian plumber to jump over the kegs, on his way to rescue a princess!
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I'm hoping those kegs get a chance to 'calm down' before they get tapped... :-)
ReplyDeleteNow I know why it takes Guinness so looong to settle :)
DeleteI wonder how long those kegs last that way.
ReplyDeleteIn London and Germany, I noticed that they refill the pubs using a hose from the beer truck. This must be a Low volume pub.
ReplyDelete--Hale
That's an old trick for unloading beer kegs. I remember when I was a kid in New York in the 1940's watching the drivers use a thick rubber pad to bounce the keg off the truck before rolling the keg into the tavern.
ReplyDeleteI kept expecting an Italian plumber to jump over the kegs, on his way to rescue a princess!
ReplyDelete