Author Archives: Rob Nesbit

About Rob Nesbit

Beer drinker and all round annoyance. Likes drinking, football, cricket and having a good time.

Bitburger Premium Pils

Bitburger Premium Pils

Bitburger Premium Pils

https://www.bitburger-international.com/en

Brewed by Bitburger Brauerei 
Style: Pilsener
Bitburg, Germany.

Bitburger Premium PilsFounded in 1817 by Johann Wallenborn, Bitburger brauerei is a large German brewery founded in 1817 with its headquarters in Bitburg, in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, southwest Germany, bordering France and Luxembourg. The brewery is now in its 7th generation of ownership. 

“Bitte ein Bit” is the company’s well known slogan. it means “A Bit, please” or more literally, “Please, a bit!” 

Their Pils is one of the most popular beers in Germany and number one beer for draft (as advertised, “Deutschlands Fassbiermarke Nr. 1”). It’s not just popular in Germany, it is also shipped to over 30 countries worldwide.

High profile sponsorship from the company includes a stint with the German National Football Team from 1992 until right up to this year 2018. The company also memorably sponsored the Benetton-Renault Formula 1 team in the years 1994 and 1995, which were specially poignant for the brand as it was also the time that German driver Michael Schumacher won the Formula One championship in both of those seasons.

Review: 0,5l in a nice white can of Bitburger Premium Pils: ABV: 4.8% vol 

Nice white can with the iconic logo from Bitburger, “Bitte ein Bit”, yeah sure why not!

On pour I got a very fluffy, very frothy white head, a pretty big head initially.
A good bit of carbonation going on, a million bubbles percolating throughout the beer, a nice sparkling yellow looking beer.  Some lacing left behind, head dies afterwards.

Very fluffy head, and a light clear yellow coloured beer with some slight lacing. Ok as a looker, not bad.

Bitburger Premium PilsHad a nice faint lagery smell, a soft light malty aroma and some grains, ok.

Initial taste was one of lovely big creamy mouthfuls.

Got a small bit of a skunky taste but it’s ok, not enough to be bothersome, and the beer has a small kick to it which I like.

This beer reminds me of an old style lager of yesterday, not too fancy or flashy and gets the basics right, plain and simple. 

Has a nice tinge to it, bit lemony as well but I like it, gives it character.
Get a lot in the can. All good.

Second can:
Great big mouthfuls, nice and smooth. 

“That” taste, has a bite to it and hoppy, but I like it, lingers. 

Not a downer, something to saviour and slowly enjoy instead. Had a nice array of soft flavours and well balanced with the hops and malts. Yeah I liked it, a good beer to chill with and relax. Will buy again. 

Could feel the alcohol. Had a bit of a head the next day.

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Berg könig Premium

Berg könig Premium

Berg könig Premium

https://egger-bier.at/en/

Brewed by Privatbrauerei Fritz Egger
Style: Premium Lager
St. Poelten, Unterradlberg, Austria

Berg könig PremiumPrivatbrauerei Fritz Egger is a private brewery from Austria. 

In 1868, the Egger family took over the long standing Gwercher Brewery which was founded way back in 1675.

The company sell large to retail companies, such as Aldi and Hofer for example, and roughly 25% of its beer is exported abroad, to mostly its central European neighbours, but also as far afield as China! 

Review: 0,33L green bottle of Berg könig Premium: ABV: 5.0% vol (Some places it can be 5.2%)

Got it cheap in Aldi Suisse, in a pack of six, cheap beer, aka Premium beer! 

On pour with some decent carbonation I get a golden yellow coloured beer with a head that after the initial excitement goes flat and goes shit. Overall its a beer that goes flat very quick and isn’t a looker at all. Flat look. Not as nice looking as first appeared. Little carbo. Flat head. Looks shit.

Berg könig PremiumSmell is light, malty. Very slight on the nose, nearly odourless in fact! Smell is beery and fruity. 

For the taste I got a bit of a hoppy aftertaste which was manageable, just about.

Ok enough not bad, little bit of an off taste, possibly corn.

Second bottle
Getting nice enough mouthfuls, some nice sweet malts. It’s not bad, I guess, drinkable, but I have had better, even if its a relatively cheap beer to purchase. Was difficult to taste the alcohol here. 

Not much to taste. Very light overall. Not a whole lot to report, pretty bland and largely forgettable. Ah well……..

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Flensburger Pilsener, Germany’s most northernly beer!

Flensburger Pilsener

http://www.flens.co.uk/

Brewed by Flensburger Brauerei 
Style: Pilsener
Flensburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.

The independent brewery, Flensburger Brauerei, was founded in 1888. It is located in Flensburg in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, in northern Germany, and can be bought all over the country. Apparently it is Germany’s most northernly brewery!

Flensburger PilsenerThe company was founded on September 6, 1888 by five citizens from Flensburg. They had everything they needed in place for a good well run brewery, an ideal site with an underground glacier spring with crystal-clear water for brewing (Which they still use today) and a way of obtaining the ice needed (in the days before refrigeration) for the lagering cellars. Today it is still mainly held by the founder families of Petersen and Dethleffsen.

All Flensburger products are bottled in glass bottles with a traditional flip-top (swing-top) opener. This has become part of its marketing shtick, a “plopp” sound is what you get when you open the unique style bottle. 

The brewery produces a wide array of beers and soft drinks, from the Pilsener styles with a unique North German variation, to dunkels, helles and weizens and for the non beer drinker they make non alcoholic beers, shandies, mineral waters and soft drinks. 

Review: 0,33l Flip top bottle of Flensburger Pilsener: ABV: 4.8% vol 

Flensburger PilsenerA beer that I spotted for sale in my local Aldi. A cheapish 6 pack. 

Just love the logo. It’s a boat on the sea sailing past a lighthouse. All coming in a lovely brown stubby flip top bottle. Apparently Flensburger have the world’s biggest automated bottling line for flip top bottles! 

On pour get a nice golden yellow coloured beer, with a smallish white head that develops. Doesn’t look particularly great, looks just ok in fact. All goes flat very quickly, little or no carbonation. Some light lacing.

A very piercing, and very citrusy smell. The malts are found on the nose, plus the hops and yeast. Ok smell. 

Flensburger PilsenerTaste, oh a surprise….a very unique taste there, very yeasty. Also very bitter, very hoppy, fuck me.
No, this is fucking horrible, hopped to death. I found it too hard to drink.

Can feel the alcohol, but it is not nice, far too raw, sour and harsh on the tongue. Where are the malts?

Second bottle,
That taste, too hoppy, needs something to balance that strong sharp taste as it is all too assaulting on the taste buds. 

No! not enjoyable at all. Sickly. Very bitter. Ok I know pilsners are a little hoppier than regular lagers, but fuck this shite!!! This hoppy style is meant to be a characteristic of a North German Pils, but as they say in England, this is not my cup of tea, definitely not!

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Castle Lager, South Africa's national beer.

Castle Lager, South Africa’s national beer.

Castle Lager

http://www.castlelager.co.za/

Brewed by South African Breweries (AB Inbev)
Style: Pale Lager 
Sandton, South Africa

Castle Lager is a South African pale lager. It is the flagship product of South African Breweries and has been described as South Africa’s national beer.

Its origins go back to the gold rush of 1886 in Johannesburg, when an Englishman, Mr. Charles Glass, founded Castle Brewery and began selling beer to the hard drinking miners of the country after noticing a gap in the market. The new beer soon became popular amongst the prospectors of the gold rush. In 1895, on the success of Castle Lager, the brewery merged with other breweries to form the South African Breweries Ltd (SAB), with its head office being the Castle Brewery.

SAB over time came to dominate not just South Africa, but most of the continent of Africa, and through a series of acquisitions and joint ventures throughout the 1990s, SAB gained a foothold in various countries in Africa, Eastern Europe (Hungary and Czech Rep.) and Asia (China and India). This was a definite process of a company from a “developing nation” buying breweries from countries that had similar geo-political, infrastructural and business issues. Success in these emerging markets showed that SAB could venture into the “Developed world”, such as in Italy and the US. Working in South Africa and in developing countries first was very beneficial as it helped the company come up with numerous innovative ways to deal with lack of infrastructure, supports, and skill shortages. It also made the company more open to take risks. The company also invested in other lucrative markets, such as running hotels and casinos, and diversified into the food industry (coffee, tea, and food products), manufacturing and retail (including green grocers, furniture factories and stores, shoe factories and stores, and clothing stores). This was a company that had its nose in every nook and cranny of SA society!

In 1999, SA Breweries formed SAB plc, and moved its primary listing to London, and in May 2002, it acquired Miller Brewing, of the United States, to establish SABMiller plc., a multinational brewing and beverage company headquartered in Woking, England, on the outskirts of London, and at that time the world’s second-largest brewery. Its brands included Fosters, Miller, and Pilsner Urquell. In 2005 a major holding in the Grupo Empresarial Bavaria was purchased, South America’s second largest brewer. In 2009 SABMiller PLC operated in 80 countries worldwide and sold around 21 billion litres of beverages.

In 2016, it was bought out by Anheuser-Busch (AB inBev), a Brazilian-Belgian corporation with headquarters in Leuven in Belgium, for about £68 billion, (yes billion!), the world’s largest beer company, with more than 400 brands and brewing interests around the world. This acquisition is the biggest in brewing history. Between SAB and Ab inBev, the two companies produce eight of the 10 most popular beer brands in the world. The two companies combined employ well over 200,00 people. This is brewing on a large scale! 

The most popular of the AB InBev brands are Bud Light, Budweiser, Stella Artois, Corona and Brahma, while for SABMiller it was Miller Light. The acquisition ended the corporate use of the name SABMiller and it ceased trading on global stock markets and became a business division of Anheuser Busch Inbev. Since SABMiller no longer exists as an entity, South African Breweries is now a subsidiary of AB InBev. A result of all this was that the company divested itself of its interests in the MillerCoors beer company to Molson Coors, the former SABMiller Ltd. business (which included Pilsner Urquell and Tyskie) in Eastern Europe was sold to Japanese giant Asahi Breweries Group Holdings, Ltd, and Anheuser-Busch InBev offloaded Grolsch Brewery, Peroni Brewery and Meantime Brewery also to Asahi, plus SABMiller’s 49 percent share in the world’s largest volume beer brand, Snow beer, was sold to China Resources Enterprise.

Castle Lager, South Africa's national beer.Back to Castle Brewery. Castle Lager sponsors a host of sporting teams and events, from the main sponsor of “Bafana Bafana”, the national football team, to the South African Cricket Team, the South African Rugby Team, ie, the “Springboks”, and a host of others. 

Others beers from the Castle stable are Castle Lite, a low alcohol beer, Castle Lite Lime, a Lime flavoured variant of Castle Lite, and the interesting Castle Milk Stout, a milk stout that is advertised as “South Africa’s Premier Stout”.

The main brand, Castle Lager, is brewed in nine countries and available in over 40 countries worldwide. It has also won many awards, from gold medals to the “World’s Best Bottled Lager” award at the 2000 International Brewing Industry Awards. 

Review: 330 ml bottle of Castle Lager: ABV: 5% vol 

Nice brown bottle with a logo of a castle, go figure, but nice all the same. 

Appearance is one of a clear golden colour, with a white head that doesn’t stay around, some small carbonation going on, and overall the beer is not much to look at at all. 

Castle Lager, South Africa's national beer.Has a nice piercing smell of sweet corn, and a lager type aroma, very malty, grainy and lemony. Ok on the nose.

Taste has nice warmish mouthfuls. Not a strong initial taste, and a bit flat.
Bit metallic in initial taste, not nice, and in overall taste as well. Difficult to drink to be frank.

Feck me this was a disgusting beer to drink. I felt a bit sick drinking it. It’s like a chemical infused beer with little thought given to flavours or tastes.

Beer two.
Taste is very hoppy, too hoppy, too much sweet corn and all a bit sour, hard to stomach especially for what is meant to be a lager. All in the front end. It’s a dead kind of taste. No, too hoppy for me, not nice. 

Very disappointing when you consider that SAB have morphed into the worlds largest brewer of beers yet their baby, Castle beer is muck. 

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Tuborg Pilsener (German version)

Tuborg Pilsener, the German version!

Tuborg Pilsener (German version)

http://www.tuborg.de/produkte

Brewed by Tuborg Deutschland GmbH 
Style: Pilsener 
Brunswick, Lower Saxony, Germany

Tuborg Pilsener (German version)Tuborg, originating in Denmark, is available in more than 70 countries in the world. It is also brewed in Hamburg in accordance with the German Purity Law of 1516.

The history of Tuborg begins in 1873 in Hellerup, in the north of Copenhagen. There, a small group of industrialists and financiers joined forces to buy a site near the port. The property bore the name “Thuesborg” in the style of its former owner, but quickly became “Tuborg” in its common usage and laid the foundation for a beer brand that is now internationally known and sold in over 70 countries worldwide.

Tuborg made his first appearance in Germany in the 1960s as an import beer. 

The beer is also known as Tuborg Grøn (Green), so must be noted that the name and distributor (German version) has changed but essentially the beer is the same as the Danish version as the recipe remains unchanged. 

Review: 33cl green bottle of Tuborg Pilsener (German version): ABV: ; 4.9% vol

Tuborg Pilsener (German version)The Germany-brewed Tuborg “Premium Quality” Pilsener. Coming in a nice looking green bottle with a rather distinctive logo. The crown representing the fact that the beer was “official court supplier of the Danish court” since 1914, as they state on their website. 

For the appearance, initially looks pretty good, all sparkling with a nice head of foam and a lovely golden colour, but boy does it go all flat very quickly with the head not lasting too long.  

Has a faint lagery smell, a bit malty and sweet, nothing amazing on the nose.

Tuborg Pilsener (German version)On taste, I got nice big mouthfuls at the start that were a bit hoppy and I could really feel the grains, not a bad initial taste.

The beer has a nice kick to it. Fruity, sweet, bitter, grainy, malty.

Taste a bit of corn as well. Not a bad tasting beer, slightly a bit too overboard with the hops perhaps, as it is a lager after all?

Not a bad tasting beer. Yeah not bad. Lagery taste with a slight kick. Bit of an aftertaste as well.
I feel the beer stops short of developing into something special, and for this reason I would like to try it again to give a better opinion.  I have had it on draught and have come to the same opinion. I really am not sure if I like this beer or not, it always stumps me! 

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