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Guinness Brewery

St. James's Gate Brewery is a brewery founded in 1759 in Dublin, Ireland, by Arthur Guinness. The company is now a part of Diageo, a company formed from the merger of Guinness and Grand Metropolitan in 1997. The main product of the brewery is Draught Guinness.

St. James's Gate Brewery
Guinness Brewery
TypePrivately held company
IndustryAlcoholic beverages
FoundedSt. James's Gate, Dublin, Ireland (1759)
FounderArthur Guinness
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsGuinness Draught
Production output
82.9 million hectolitres
50.7 million barrels
OwnerDiageo
ParentDiageo (1997–present)
Websitewww.guinnessstorehouse.com

Originally leased in 1759 to Arthur Guinness at £45 per year for 9,000 years, the St. James's Gate area has been the home of Guinness ever since. It became the largest brewery in Ireland in 1838, and the largest in the world by 1886, with an annual output of 1.2 million barrels.[1] Although no longer the largest brewery in the world, it remains as the largest brewer of stout. The company has since bought out the originally leased property,[2] and during the 19th and early 20th centuries, the brewery owned most of the buildings in the surrounding area, including many streets of housing for brewery employees, and offices associated with the brewery. The brewery had its own power plant.[3][4]

There is an attached exhibition on the 250-year-old history of Guinness, called the Guinness Storehouse.

History

 
Gate at Guinness Brewery
 
Guinness Brewery in Dublin
 
Arthur Guinness Son & Co. Limited, 6% Preference Stock, issued 5. November 1889[5]

Arthur Guinness started brewing ales in Leixlip, County Kildare, and then from 1759 at the St. James's Gate Brewery in Dublin. On 31 December he signed a 9,000-year lease at £45 per annum for the unused brewery.[6][7] However, the lease is no longer in effect because the brewery property has been bought out when it expanded beyond the original 4-acre site.[2]

Ten years after establishment, on 19 May 1769 Guinness exported his beer (he had ceased ale brewing by then) for the first time, when six and a half barrels were shipped to England. The business expanded by adopting steam power and further exporting to the English market. On the death of Benjamin Guinness in 1868 the business was worth over £1 million, and the brewery site had grown from about 1 acre to over 64 acres. In 1886 his son Edward sold 65 per cent of the business by a public offering on the London Stock Exchange for £6 million.

The company pioneered several quality control efforts. The brewery hired the statistician William Sealy Gosset in 1899, who achieved lasting fame under the pseudonym "Student" for techniques developed for Guinness, particularly Student's t-distribution and the even more commonly known Student's t-test.[8]

Because of the Irish Free State's "Control of Manufactures Act" in 1932, the company moved its headquarters to London later that year.[9] Guinness brewed its last porter in 1974.

In 1983, a non-family chief executive Ernest Saunders was appointed and arranged the reverse takeover of the leading Scotch whisky producer Distillers in 1986. Saunders was then asked to resign following revelations that the Guinness stock price had been illegally manipulated (see Guinness share-trading fraud).

In 1986, Guinness PLC was in the midst of a bidding war for the much larger Distillers Company. In the closing stages, Guinness' stock rose 25 per cent — which was unusual, since the stock of the acquiring company usually falls in a takeover situation. Guinness paid several people and institutions, most notably American arbitrageur Ivan Boesky, about US$38 million to buy US$300 million worth of Guinness stock. The effect was to increase the value of its offer for Distillers, whose management favoured merging with Guinness.

In the course of the investigation, it emerged that Bank Leu was involved in half of the purchases. Two of Guinness' directors signed under-the-table agreements in which Bank Leu subsidiaries in Zug and Lucerne bought 41 million Guinness shares. Guinness secretly promised to redeem the shares at cost, including commissions. To fulfil its end of the bargain, Guinness deposited $76 million with Bank Leu's Luxembourg subsidiary.

As Distillers was worth more than Guinness plc, the Guinness family shareholding in the merged company went below 10 per cent, and today no member of the family sits on the board. Guinness acquired the Distillers Company in 1986.[10]

The company merged with Grand Metropolitan in 1997, to form Diageo plc, capitalised in 2006 at about 40 billion euros.[11] Although not officially fully taken over, the Guinness family still owns 51 per cent of the brewery. The Guinness brewery in Park Royal, London closed in 2005. The production of all Guinness sold in the UK and Ireland was switched to St. James's Gate Brewery Dublin.[12]

In 2018, Guinness opened its first brewery in 64 years in the United States, in Baltimore, Maryland.[13] The last Guinness brewery in the US closed in 1954.[14] This US location will focus on "special news" and Guinness Blonde American Lager, but not the classic stout, which will still only be brewed in Dublin.[15][16]

According to a Diageo publication in 2019, the St James' Gate brewery was then operating at over 90 percent capacity and one of the "most profitable breweries in the world".[17]

Products

The main product is Guinness Draught, a 4.2% ABV dry stout that is one of the most successful beer brands worldwide. For many years a portion of the drink was aged to give a sharp lactic flavour, although Guinness has refused to confirm whether this still occurs. The thick creamy head is the result of the beer being mixed with nitrogen when being poured. It is popular with Irish people both in Ireland and abroad and, in spite of a decline in consumption over recent years, is the best-selling alcoholic drink of all time in Ireland[18][19] where Guinness & Co. makes almost €2 billion annually. The brewery also produces Guinness Original, a 4.3% ABV version of the Draught, without the nitrogen;[20] Kaliber, a low alcohol pale lager; Guinness Bitter, a 4.4% bitter sold in a can with a widget; and the 7.5% Guinness Foreign Extra Stout.

Varieties

 
Guinness Original/Extra Stout

Guinness stout is available in a number of variants and strengths, which include:

  • Guinness Draught, sold in kegs, widget cans, and bottles: 4.1 to 4.3% alcohol by volume (abv); the Extra Cold is served through a super cooler at 3.5 °C (38.3 °F).[21]
  • Guinness Original/Extra Stout: 4.2 or 4.3% ABV in Ireland and the rest of Europe, 4.1% in Germany, 4.8% in Namibia and South Africa, 5.6% in the United States and Canada, and 6% in Australia and Japan.
  • Guinness Foreign Extra Stout: 7.5% abv version sold in Europe, America, Africa, the Caribbean and Asia. The basis is unfermented but hopped Guinness wort extract shipped from Dublin, which is added to local ingredients and brewed locally. The strength can vary, for example, it is sold at 5% ABV in China, 6.5% ABV in Jamaica and East Africa, and 8% ABV in Singapore.[22] In Nigeria a proportion of sorghum is used. Foreign Extra Stout is blended with a small amount of intentionally soured beer.[23]
  • Guinness Special Export Stout, sold in Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, originally brewed in 1945 for the NAAFI to be sent to British troops stationed in Europe.[24]
  • Guinness Bitter, an English-style bitter beer: 4.4% ABV.
  • Guinness Extra Smooth, a smoother stout sold in Ghana, Cameroon and Nigeria: 5.5% ABV.
  • Malta Guinness, a non-alcoholic sweet drink, produced in Nigeria and exported to the UK and Malaysia.
  • Guinness Mid-Strength, a low-alcohol stout test-marketed in Limerick, Ireland in March 2006[25] and Dublin from May 2007:[26] 2.8% ABV.
  • Kaliber, a premium alcohol-free lager. It is brewed as a full-strength lager; then at the end of the brewing process, the alcohol is removed: 0.05% ABV.
  • Guinness Red, brewed in exactly the same way as Guinness except that the barley is only lightly roasted so that it produces a lighter, slightly fruitier red ale; test-marketed in Britain in February 2007: 4.1% ABV.[27]
  • 250 Anniversary Stout, released in the US, Australia and Singapore on 24 April 2009:[28] 5% ABV.
  • Guinness Nitro IPA, introduced in September 2015. An ale made with 5 varieties of hops (admiral, celeia, topaz, challenger, and cascade). It is packaged in cans with a nitrogen widget at 5.8% ABV.

In 2005, Guinness announced the Brewhouse Series, a limited-edition collection of draught stouts available for roughly six months each. There were three beers in the series:

  • Brew 39 was launched in October 2005. It used the late addition of hops to "give it a smooth and distinctive finish".[29]
  • Toucan Brew was introduced in May 2006. It was named after the cartoon toucan used in many Guinness advertisements. This beer had a crisper taste with a slightly sweet aftertaste due to its triple-hopped brewing process.
  • North Star was introduced in October 2006 and sold until late 2007. Three million pints of North Star were sold in the latter half of 2007.[30]

Despite an announcement in June 2007 that the fourth Brewhouse stout would be launched in October that year,[31] no new beer appeared and, at the end of 2007, the Brewhouse series appeared to have been quietly cancelled.

Withdrawn Guinness variants include Guinness's Brite Lager, Guinness's Brite Ale, Guinness Light, Guinness XXX Extra Strong Stout, Guinness Cream Stout, Guinness Gold, Guinness Pilsner, Guinness Breó (a slightly citrusy wheat beer), Guinness Shandy, and Guinness Special Light. Breó (meaning 'glow' in ancient Irish) was a wheat beer; it cost around 5 million Irish pounds to develop.

For a short time in the late 1990s, Guinness produced the "St James's Gate" range of craft-style beers, available in a small number of Dublin pubs. The beers were: Pilsner Gold, Wicked Red Ale, Wildcat Wheat Beer and Dark Angel Lager.

A brewing byproduct of Guinness, Guinness Yeast Extract (GYE), was produced until the 1950s.

Guinness family

A grandson of the original Arthur Guinness, Sir Benjamin Guinness, was a Lord Mayor of Dublin and was created a baronet in 1867, only to die the next year. His eldest son Arthur, Baron Ardilaun (1840–1915), sold control of the brewery to Sir Benjamin's third son Edward (1847–1927), who was created Lord Iveagh in 1891 and Earl of Iveagh in 1919. Edward Guinness launched the company on the London Stock Exchange in 1886. Up until then, the only other partners outside of the Guinness family were members of the Purser family, who shared control of the brewery throughout most of the nineteenth century. He, his son Rupert and great-grandson Benjamin, the second and third Earls, chaired the Guinness company until the third earl's death in 1992. There are no longer any members of the Guinness family on the board.

Plans

On 17 June 2007, The Sunday Independent first reported that Diageo was considering selling most of the St. James's Gate Brewery to take advantage of high property prices in Ireland.[32] The story was widely picked up by both national and international media organisations, but the proposal to build a new Dublin brewery at Leixlip on land belonging to Desmond Guinness was cancelled by the end of 2008. By then Irish property prices had dropped, and so the possibility of selling much of the current brewery to meet the lower cost of building a new one had passed.[33]

The following day, the Irish Daily Mail ran a follow-up story with a double-page spread complete with images and a history of the plant since 1759. Initially, Diageo said that talk of a move was pure speculation but in the face of mounting speculation in the wake of the Sunday Independent article, the company confirmed that it is undertaking a "significant review of its operations". This review is largely due to the efforts of the company's ongoing drive to reduce the environmental impact of brewing at the St James's Gate plant.[34]

On 23 November 2007, an article appeared in the Evening Herald, a Dublin newspaper, stating that Dublin City Council, in the best interests of the city of Dublin, had put forward a motion to prevent planning permission ever being granted for the development of the site thus making it very difficult for Diageo to sell off the site for residential development.

On 9 May 2008, Diageo announced that the St James's Gate brewery will remain open and undergo renovations, but that breweries in Kilkenny and Dundalk will be closed by 2013 when a new larger brewery is opened near Dublin. The result will be a loss of roughly 250 jobs across the entire Diageo/Guinness workforce in Ireland.[35] Two days later, the Sunday Independent again reported that Diageo chiefs had met with Tánaiste Mary Coughlan, the deputy leader of the Government of Ireland, about moving operations to Ireland from the UK to benefit from its lower corporation tax rates. Several UK firms have made the move to pay Ireland's 12.5 per cent rate rather than the UK's 28 per cent rate.[36] Diageo released a statement to the London Stock Exchange denying the report.[37]

In 2015, Diageo launched the Brewers Project, in an attempt to diversify the company's product range and expand into the craft beer industry which had become popular. Hop House 13, a lager named after a store at the St James's Gate brewery extant in the early 20th century, was heavily promoted on YouTube and social media.[38]

Camino de Santiago

St. James's Gate in Dublin was traditionally the main starting point for Irish pilgrims to begin their journey on the Camino de Santiago (Way of St. James). The pilgrims' passports were stamped here before setting sail, usually for A Coruña, north of Santiago. It is still possible for Irish pilgrims to get these traditional documents stamped both at Guinness Storehouse and St James' Church, and many do, while on their way to Santiago de Compostela.[39]

Guinness Storehouse

 
Smoke from a 2009 fire at the brewery in which two firefighters were injured.[40]

Guinness Storehouse, the "Home of Guinness", is Dublin's most popular tourist attraction. A converted brewing factory, it is now a Guinness museum, incorporating elements from the old brewing factory to explain the history of its production. Some of the old brewing equipment is on show, as well as stout ingredients, brewing techniques, advertising methods and storage devices.

The exhibition takes place over seven floors, in the shape of a 14 million-pint glass of Guinness. The final floor is the Gravity Bar, which has an almost 360° panorama over the city, where visitors can claim a pint of "the black stuff".

The storehouse is where they used to add the yeast to the beer for fermentation.

Guinness Storehouse visitors do not get to see the beer being brewed in front of them, but from various vantage points in the building, you may see parts of the brewhouse, vats, grain silos and the keg yard.

See also

References

  1. ^ "When Brick Lane was home to the biggest brewery in the world | Zythophile". zythophile.wordpress.com. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Guinness Storehouse FAQ". Guinness-Storehouse.com. Retrieved 18 March 2012. Q:I s the 9,000-year lease still valid? A: The 9,000-year lease signed in 1759 was for a 4 acre brewery site. Today, the brewery covers over 50 acres, which grew up over the past 200 years around the original 4 acre site. The 1759 lease is no longer valid as the Company purchased the lands outright many years ago.
  3. ^ "Power House, Guinness Brewery, St. James' Gate, Dublin 8". Built Dublin. 24 May 1950. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  4. ^ "Guinness Power Station, St Jame's Gate, Dublin". Manchesterhistory.net. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  5. ^ Jakob Schmitz: Aufbruch auf Aktien, p. 95, ISBN 3878811012
  6. ^ . Diageo. 2011. Archived from the original on 1 December 2011. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  7. ^ (PDF). Guinness Storehous. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 November 2011. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  8. ^ Douglas W. Hubbard, How To Measure Anything (John Wiley & Sons, 2007) page 133-134.
  9. ^ Oliver, Garrett (2011). The Oxford Companion To Beer. Oxford University Press. p. 494. ISBN 9780195367133.
  10. ^
  11. ^ Spirits soar at Diageo 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Guinness to close its London Brewery 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Maryland's new Guinness brewery is a destination for fans — and everyone else, too". The Washington Post.
  14. ^ "Guinness Opens Its First U.S. Brewery In 64 Years". NPR.org. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  15. ^ Barth, Jill. "Why Guinness Chose Maryland For Its Only American Brewery". Forbes. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  16. ^ Smith, Aaron (28 June 2018). "Guinness to open its first American brewery in 64 years". CNNMoney.
  17. ^ O'Keeffe, John; Sandys, Mark. "Delivering Sustained Growth in Beer" (PDF). Diageo.com. Diageo. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  18. ^ Barry, Dan (28 August 2000). "In Ireland's Pubs, a Startling Trend". Lisdoonvarna Journal. The New York Times. Retrieved 10 April 2008. ...  Guinness stout remains the best-selling alcoholic beverage in Ireland, over the last year its consumption here has declined by nearly 4 per cent.
  19. ^ . Drinks Industry Ireland. Barkeeper. 26 February 2007. Archived from the original on 19 November 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2008. Nevertheless, Guinness continues to be Ireland's number one beer 'by a wide margin' according to Michael Patten, Group Corporate Relations Director at Diageo Ireland, 'More than 40 per cent of all draught beer sold in Ireland is a Guinness'.
  20. ^ "Guinness Original / Extra Stout (Ireland/UK) from St. James's Gate (Diageo) – Ratebeer". ratebeer.com. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  21. ^ Guinness website[dead link] Guinness Extra Cold
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 March 2010.
  23. ^ Formerly it was blended with beer that soured naturally as a result of fermenting in ancient oak tuns with a Brettanomyces population. It is now made with pasteurized beer that has been soured bacterially. Protz, R. (1996). The Ale Trail. Kent: Eric Dobby Publishing. pp. 174–176.
  24. ^ Guinness Dublin[1] Guinness, 1952. Printed by Hely's Ltd, East Wall, Dublin.
  25. ^ Low alcohol Guinness Stout 3 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Weaker stout designed to pull Guinness out of a slump Irish Times Online
  27. ^ Guinness Red 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ "Guinness to offer new stout for limited time – Food Inc.- NBC News". NBC News.
  29. ^ "Untappd".
  30. ^
  31. ^
  32. ^ Daniel McConnell (17 June 2007). "Last orders for Guinness time at St James's Gate". Irish Independent. Retrieved 17 June 2007.
  33. ^ Irish Times interview on 20 February 2009
  34. ^
  35. ^ Diageo keeps Dublin Guinness site, to build new one
  36. ^ Horan, Niamh; McConnell, Daniel (11 May 2008). "Diageo is 'seriously considering' Irish move". Irish Independent.
  37. ^ "Diageo denies report it plans tax move to Ireland". Reuters. 11 May 2008.
  38. ^ "Diageo brews up 7-figure campaign for Guinness craft lager Hop House 13". The Drum. 19 April 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  39. ^ Irish Society of the Friends of St.James » Practical Information
  40. ^ "Two firefighters hurt in Guinness blaze". RTÉ News. 21 December 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2009.

External links

  • Guinness Storehouse – Official Website
  • Diageo – Official Website

Coordinates: 53°20′40″N 6°17′20″W / 53.34444°N 6.28889°W / 53.34444; -6.28889

guinness, brewery, james, gate, brewery, guinness, redirect, here, other, uses, james, gate, guinness, disambiguation, james, gate, brewery, brewery, founded, 1759, dublin, ireland, arthur, guinness, company, part, diageo, company, formed, from, merger, guinne. St James Gate Brewery and Guinness Plc redirect here For other uses see St James s Gate and Guinness disambiguation St James s Gate Brewery is a brewery founded in 1759 in Dublin Ireland by Arthur Guinness The company is now a part of Diageo a company formed from the merger of Guinness and Grand Metropolitan in 1997 The main product of the brewery is Draught Guinness St James s Gate BreweryGuinness BreweryTypePrivately held companyIndustryAlcoholic beveragesFoundedSt James s Gate Dublin Ireland 1759 FounderArthur GuinnessHeadquartersDublin IrelandArea servedWorldwideProductsGuinness DraughtProduction output82 9 million hectolitres50 7 million barrelsOwnerDiageoParentDiageo 1997 present Websitewww guinnessstorehouse comOriginally leased in 1759 to Arthur Guinness at 45 per year for 9 000 years the St James s Gate area has been the home of Guinness ever since It became the largest brewery in Ireland in 1838 and the largest in the world by 1886 with an annual output of 1 2 million barrels 1 Although no longer the largest brewery in the world it remains as the largest brewer of stout The company has since bought out the originally leased property 2 and during the 19th and early 20th centuries the brewery owned most of the buildings in the surrounding area including many streets of housing for brewery employees and offices associated with the brewery The brewery had its own power plant 3 4 There is an attached exhibition on the 250 year old history of Guinness called the Guinness Storehouse Contents 1 History 2 Products 2 1 Varieties 3 Guinness family 4 Plans 5 Camino de Santiago 6 Guinness Storehouse 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Gate at Guinness Brewery Guinness Brewery in Dublin Arthur Guinness Son amp Co Limited 6 Preference Stock issued 5 November 1889 5 Arthur Guinness started brewing ales in Leixlip County Kildare and then from 1759 at the St James s Gate Brewery in Dublin On 31 December he signed a 9 000 year lease at 45 per annum for the unused brewery 6 7 However the lease is no longer in effect because the brewery property has been bought out when it expanded beyond the original 4 acre site 2 Ten years after establishment on 19 May 1769 Guinness exported his beer he had ceased ale brewing by then for the first time when six and a half barrels were shipped to England The business expanded by adopting steam power and further exporting to the English market On the death of Benjamin Guinness in 1868 the business was worth over 1 million and the brewery site had grown from about 1 acre to over 64 acres In 1886 his son Edward sold 65 per cent of the business by a public offering on the London Stock Exchange for 6 million The company pioneered several quality control efforts The brewery hired the statistician William Sealy Gosset in 1899 who achieved lasting fame under the pseudonym Student for techniques developed for Guinness particularly Student s t distribution and the even more commonly known Student s t test 8 Because of the Irish Free State s Control of Manufactures Act in 1932 the company moved its headquarters to London later that year 9 Guinness brewed its last porter in 1974 In 1983 a non family chief executive Ernest Saunders was appointed and arranged the reverse takeover of the leading Scotch whisky producer Distillers in 1986 Saunders was then asked to resign following revelations that the Guinness stock price had been illegally manipulated see Guinness share trading fraud In 1986 Guinness PLC was in the midst of a bidding war for the much larger Distillers Company In the closing stages Guinness stock rose 25 per cent which was unusual since the stock of the acquiring company usually falls in a takeover situation Guinness paid several people and institutions most notably American arbitrageur Ivan Boesky about US 38 million to buy US 300 million worth of Guinness stock The effect was to increase the value of its offer for Distillers whose management favoured merging with Guinness In the course of the investigation it emerged that Bank Leu was involved in half of the purchases Two of Guinness directors signed under the table agreements in which Bank Leu subsidiaries in Zug and Lucerne bought 41 million Guinness shares Guinness secretly promised to redeem the shares at cost including commissions To fulfil its end of the bargain Guinness deposited 76 million with Bank Leu s Luxembourg subsidiary As Distillers was worth more than Guinness plc the Guinness family shareholding in the merged company went below 10 per cent and today no member of the family sits on the board Guinness acquired the Distillers Company in 1986 10 The company merged with Grand Metropolitan in 1997 to form Diageo plc capitalised in 2006 at about 40 billion euros 11 Although not officially fully taken over the Guinness family still owns 51 per cent of the brewery The Guinness brewery in Park Royal London closed in 2005 The production of all Guinness sold in the UK and Ireland was switched to St James s Gate Brewery Dublin 12 In 2018 Guinness opened its first brewery in 64 years in the United States in Baltimore Maryland 13 The last Guinness brewery in the US closed in 1954 14 This US location will focus on special news and Guinness Blonde American Lager but not the classic stout which will still only be brewed in Dublin 15 16 According to a Diageo publication in 2019 the St James Gate brewery was then operating at over 90 percent capacity and one of the most profitable breweries in the world 17 Products EditThe main product is Guinness Draught a 4 2 ABV dry stout that is one of the most successful beer brands worldwide For many years a portion of the drink was aged to give a sharp lactic flavour although Guinness has refused to confirm whether this still occurs The thick creamy head is the result of the beer being mixed with nitrogen when being poured It is popular with Irish people both in Ireland and abroad and in spite of a decline in consumption over recent years is the best selling alcoholic drink of all time in Ireland 18 19 where Guinness amp Co makes almost 2 billion annually The brewery also produces Guinness Original a 4 3 ABV version of the Draught without the nitrogen 20 Kaliber a low alcohol pale lager Guinness Bitter a 4 4 bitter sold in a can with a widget and the 7 5 Guinness Foreign Extra Stout Varieties Edit Guinness Original Extra Stout Guinness stout is available in a number of variants and strengths which include Guinness Draught sold in kegs widget cans and bottles 4 1 to 4 3 alcohol by volume abv the Extra Cold is served through a super cooler at 3 5 C 38 3 F 21 Guinness Original Extra Stout 4 2 or 4 3 ABV in Ireland and the rest of Europe 4 1 in Germany 4 8 in Namibia and South Africa 5 6 in the United States and Canada and 6 in Australia and Japan Guinness Foreign Extra Stout 7 5 abv version sold in Europe America Africa the Caribbean and Asia The basis is unfermented but hopped Guinness wort extract shipped from Dublin which is added to local ingredients and brewed locally The strength can vary for example it is sold at 5 ABV in China 6 5 ABV in Jamaica and East Africa and 8 ABV in Singapore 22 In Nigeria a proportion of sorghum is used Foreign Extra Stout is blended with a small amount of intentionally soured beer 23 Guinness Special Export Stout sold in Germany Belgium and the Netherlands originally brewed in 1945 for the NAAFI to be sent to British troops stationed in Europe 24 Guinness Bitter an English style bitter beer 4 4 ABV Guinness Extra Smooth a smoother stout sold in Ghana Cameroon and Nigeria 5 5 ABV Malta Guinness a non alcoholic sweet drink produced in Nigeria and exported to the UK and Malaysia Guinness Mid Strength a low alcohol stout test marketed in Limerick Ireland in March 2006 25 and Dublin from May 2007 26 2 8 ABV Kaliber a premium alcohol free lager It is brewed as a full strength lager then at the end of the brewing process the alcohol is removed 0 05 ABV Guinness Red brewed in exactly the same way as Guinness except that the barley is only lightly roasted so that it produces a lighter slightly fruitier red ale test marketed in Britain in February 2007 4 1 ABV 27 250 Anniversary Stout released in the US Australia and Singapore on 24 April 2009 28 5 ABV Guinness Nitro IPA introduced in September 2015 An ale made with 5 varieties of hops admiral celeia topaz challenger and cascade It is packaged in cans with a nitrogen widget at 5 8 ABV In 2005 Guinness announced the Brewhouse Series a limited edition collection of draught stouts available for roughly six months each There were three beers in the series Brew 39 was launched in October 2005 It used the late addition of hops to give it a smooth and distinctive finish 29 Toucan Brew was introduced in May 2006 It was named after the cartoon toucan used in many Guinness advertisements This beer had a crisper taste with a slightly sweet aftertaste due to its triple hopped brewing process North Star was introduced in October 2006 and sold until late 2007 Three million pints of North Star were sold in the latter half of 2007 30 Despite an announcement in June 2007 that the fourth Brewhouse stout would be launched in October that year 31 no new beer appeared and at the end of 2007 the Brewhouse series appeared to have been quietly cancelled Withdrawn Guinness variants include Guinness s Brite Lager Guinness s Brite Ale Guinness Light Guinness XXX Extra Strong Stout Guinness Cream Stout Guinness Gold Guinness Pilsner Guinness Breo a slightly citrusy wheat beer Guinness Shandy and Guinness Special Light Breo meaning glow in ancient Irish was a wheat beer it cost around 5 million Irish pounds to develop For a short time in the late 1990s Guinness produced the St James s Gate range of craft style beers available in a small number of Dublin pubs The beers were Pilsner Gold Wicked Red Ale Wildcat Wheat Beer and Dark Angel Lager A brewing byproduct of Guinness Guinness Yeast Extract GYE was produced until the 1950s Guinness family EditA grandson of the original Arthur Guinness Sir Benjamin Guinness was a Lord Mayor of Dublin and was created a baronet in 1867 only to die the next year His eldest son Arthur Baron Ardilaun 1840 1915 sold control of the brewery to Sir Benjamin s third son Edward 1847 1927 who was created Lord Iveagh in 1891 and Earl of Iveagh in 1919 Edward Guinness launched the company on the London Stock Exchange in 1886 Up until then the only other partners outside of the Guinness family were members of the Purser family who shared control of the brewery throughout most of the nineteenth century He his son Rupert and great grandson Benjamin the second and third Earls chaired the Guinness company until the third earl s death in 1992 There are no longer any members of the Guinness family on the board Plans EditOn 17 June 2007 The Sunday Independent first reported that Diageo was considering selling most of the St James s Gate Brewery to take advantage of high property prices in Ireland 32 The story was widely picked up by both national and international media organisations but the proposal to build a new Dublin brewery at Leixlip on land belonging to Desmond Guinness was cancelled by the end of 2008 By then Irish property prices had dropped and so the possibility of selling much of the current brewery to meet the lower cost of building a new one had passed 33 The following day the Irish Daily Mail ran a follow up story with a double page spread complete with images and a history of the plant since 1759 Initially Diageo said that talk of a move was pure speculation but in the face of mounting speculation in the wake of the Sunday Independent article the company confirmed that it is undertaking a significant review of its operations This review is largely due to the efforts of the company s ongoing drive to reduce the environmental impact of brewing at the St James s Gate plant 34 On 23 November 2007 an article appeared in the Evening Herald a Dublin newspaper stating that Dublin City Council in the best interests of the city of Dublin had put forward a motion to prevent planning permission ever being granted for the development of the site thus making it very difficult for Diageo to sell off the site for residential development On 9 May 2008 Diageo announced that the St James s Gate brewery will remain open and undergo renovations but that breweries in Kilkenny and Dundalk will be closed by 2013 when a new larger brewery is opened near Dublin The result will be a loss of roughly 250 jobs across the entire Diageo Guinness workforce in Ireland 35 Two days later the Sunday Independent again reported that Diageo chiefs had met with Tanaiste Mary Coughlan the deputy leader of the Government of Ireland about moving operations to Ireland from the UK to benefit from its lower corporation tax rates Several UK firms have made the move to pay Ireland s 12 5 per cent rate rather than the UK s 28 per cent rate 36 Diageo released a statement to the London Stock Exchange denying the report 37 In 2015 Diageo launched the Brewers Project in an attempt to diversify the company s product range and expand into the craft beer industry which had become popular Hop House 13 a lager named after a store at the St James s Gate brewery extant in the early 20th century was heavily promoted on YouTube and social media 38 Camino de Santiago EditSt James s Gate in Dublin was traditionally the main starting point for Irish pilgrims to begin their journey on the Camino de Santiago Way of St James The pilgrims passports were stamped here before setting sail usually for A Coruna north of Santiago It is still possible for Irish pilgrims to get these traditional documents stamped both at Guinness Storehouse and St James Church and many do while on their way to Santiago de Compostela 39 Guinness Storehouse Edit Smoke from a 2009 fire at the brewery in which two firefighters were injured 40 Main article Guinness Storehouse Guinness Storehouse the Home of Guinness is Dublin s most popular tourist attraction A converted brewing factory it is now a Guinness museum incorporating elements from the old brewing factory to explain the history of its production Some of the old brewing equipment is on show as well as stout ingredients brewing techniques advertising methods and storage devices The exhibition takes place over seven floors in the shape of a 14 million pint glass of Guinness The final floor is the Gravity Bar which has an almost 360 panorama over the city where visitors can claim a pint of the black stuff The storehouse is where they used to add the yeast to the beer for fermentation Guinness Storehouse visitors do not get to see the beer being brewed in front of them but from various vantage points in the building you may see parts of the brewhouse vats grain silos and the keg yard See also EditGuinness Brewery tramways Guinness World Records St James s Gate F C References Edit When Brick Lane was home to the biggest brewery in the world Zythophile zythophile wordpress com 14 March 2013 Retrieved 14 September 2014 a b Guinness Storehouse FAQ Guinness Storehouse com Retrieved 18 March 2012 Q I s the 9 000 year lease still valid A The 9 000 year lease signed in 1759 was for a 4 acre brewery site Today the brewery covers over 50 acres which grew up over the past 200 years around the original 4 acre site The 1759 lease is no longer valid as the Company purchased the lands outright many years ago Power House Guinness Brewery St James Gate Dublin 8 Built Dublin 24 May 1950 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Guinness Power Station St Jame s Gate Dublin Manchesterhistory net Retrieved 31 October 2019 Jakob Schmitz Aufbruch auf Aktien p 95 ISBN 3878811012 Arthur s Day 2011 Diageo 2011 Archived from the original on 1 December 2011 Retrieved 12 December 2011 Archive Fact Sheet Arthur Guinness 1725 1803 PDF Guinness Storehous Archived from the original PDF on 4 November 2011 Retrieved 12 December 2011 Douglas W Hubbard How To Measure Anything John Wiley amp Sons 2007 page 133 134 Oliver Garrett 2011 The Oxford Companion To Beer Oxford University Press p 494 ISBN 9780195367133 Diageo History Spirits soar at Diageo Archived 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Guinness to close its London Brewery Archived 10 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Maryland s new Guinness brewery is a destination for fans and everyone else too The Washington Post Guinness Opens Its First U S Brewery In 64 Years NPR org Retrieved 29 November 2020 Barth Jill Why Guinness Chose Maryland For Its Only American Brewery Forbes Retrieved 29 November 2020 Smith Aaron 28 June 2018 Guinness to open its first American brewery in 64 years CNNMoney O Keeffe John Sandys Mark Delivering Sustained Growth in Beer PDF Diageo com Diageo Retrieved 11 February 2020 Barry Dan 28 August 2000 In Ireland s Pubs a Startling Trend Lisdoonvarna Journal The New York Times Retrieved 10 April 2008 Guinness stout remains the best selling alcoholic beverage in Ireland over the last year its consumption here has declined by nearly 4 per cent Diageo Beer sales continue decline Drinks Industry Ireland Barkeeper 26 February 2007 Archived from the original on 19 November 2007 Retrieved 10 April 2008 Nevertheless Guinness continues to be Ireland s number one beer by a wide margin according to Michael Patten Group Corporate Relations Director at Diageo Ireland More than 40 per cent of all draught beer sold in Ireland is a Guinness Guinness Original Extra Stout Ireland UK from St James s Gate Diageo Ratebeer ratebeer com Retrieved 28 August 2009 Guinness website dead link Guinness Extra Cold APB About APB Our Markets Singapore Archived from the original on 2 March 2010 Formerly it was blended with beer that soured naturally as a result of fermenting in ancient oak tuns with a Brettanomyces population It is now made with pasteurized beer that has been soured bacterially Protz R 1996 The Ale Trail Kent Eric Dobby Publishing pp 174 176 Guinness Dublin 1 Guinness 1952 Printed by Hely s Ltd East Wall Dublin Low alcohol Guinness Stout Archived 3 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Weaker stout designed to pull Guinness out of a slump Irish Times Online Guinness Red Archived 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Guinness to offer new stout for limited time Food Inc NBC News NBC News Untappd Guinness sales rally for Diageo in Guinness to launch fourth in brewhouse series Daniel McConnell 17 June 2007 Last orders for Guinness time at St James s Gate Irish Independent Retrieved 17 June 2007 Irish Times interview on 20 February 2009 Diageo pledges green future for the black stuff Diageo keeps Dublin Guinness site to build new one Horan Niamh McConnell Daniel 11 May 2008 Diageo is seriously considering Irish move Irish Independent Diageo denies report it plans tax move to Ireland Reuters 11 May 2008 Diageo brews up 7 figure campaign for Guinness craft lager Hop House 13 The Drum 19 April 2016 Retrieved 20 May 2019 Irish Society of the Friends of St James Practical Information Two firefighters hurt in Guinness blaze RTE News 21 December 2009 Retrieved 21 December 2009 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guinness Brewery Guinness Storehouse Official Website Diageo Official WebsiteCoordinates 53 20 40 N 6 17 20 W 53 34444 N 6 28889 W 53 34444 6 28889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guinness Brewery amp oldid 1148336131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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