FYI, How to pour a perfect pint of stout.
http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-guinness15mar15,1,381929.story?c…
From the Los Angeles Times
WINE & SPIRITS
Now that's a magical pint
Just in time for St. Patrick's Day, Guinness' brew master teaches us the art of
"the Pour."
By Charles Perry
Times Staff Writer
March 15, 2006
FERGAL MURRAY starts to pour a Guinness. It wouldn't be true to say a hush has fallen
over the pub, but we are paying attention here at Casey's Irish Bar & Grille in
downtown L.A. If anybody knows how to pour a pint, it's Murray . he's the brew
master at the Guinness Brewery in Dublin.
Murray is everybody's archetype of a Dubliner, rugged and curly-haired with an air of
wry humor, except that even more than most Irishmen, he's totally focused on
Guinness. Guinness is his life; when he's in Dublin, he tastes every batch
that's brewed to maintain consistency. When he's not, it's because
he's on the road to check out the taps and hoses at bars that serve Guinness around
the world and to show "the Pour."
There is an art to pouring Guinness Draught Stout, and it's worth knowing, since
Guinness is the quasi-official drink of St. Patrick's Day, coming up Friday. The
brewery estimates an average of 150 pints of Guinness will get poured every second of
those 24 hours.
And the proper way to pour it is the reverse of how most beers are poured. With a lager or
an ale, or even a Guinness Extra Stout (a different style of stout also bottled by
Guinness), you should splash a nice, foamy head into your glass to waft the beer's
aroma into the air, then turn the glass at an angle and slide the rest of the beer under
the head to keep the carbonation alive.
Not so with Guinness Draught, which is about creaminess, rather than sparkle.
First you take a pint glass, preferably one that balloons slightly toward the top, a shape
that lets the beer form a higher head. While the Casey's staff scrambles to find a
proper Guinness glass, Murray sportingly proceeds with an ordinary straight-sided pint
glass.
The next step is to put the glass under the tap . or the opening of a bottle or can . at a
45-degree angle. "Let it flow down the side," Murray says, "never allowing
the tap to touch the head." Pour it about three-quarters full, leaving about an inch
from head to rim.
Then you set the glass down for what is known as the "settle." Technically,
Guinness Draught is more nitrogenated than carbonated. Nitrogen is less soluble in water
than carbon dioxide, so it forms a smaller, tighter bubble, creating the distinctive
cream-white Guinness head. (A number of beers, particularly microbrews, have also followed
the nitrogen route in recent years.)
During the "settle," tiny bubbles of nitrogen rise in the dark beer, the roiling
currents inside the glass producing a shimmering, cascading visual effect at its sides.
"The nitrogen is trying to go back into solution, but it can't because it's
not under pressure anymore," observes Murray. After a minute, about a third of an
inch of head has formed.
Finally, you top up the glass, pouring straight into the head so that it forms a
"domed crown" extending a bit higher than the rim. This is the dramatic moment
to serve it, with some of those tiny bubbles still struggling to the top, just before it
settles into the striking two-tone Guinness look, white on top and nearly black beneath,
like a quaffable saddle oxford.
When poured right, this head lasts to the end of the pint. Some bartenders like to
"paint" a design on top by dribbling a tiny amount from the tap while moving the
glass around under it. "I can do the shamrock," Casey's bartender Naomi
Schimeck boasts.
Now you drink it. "Drink through the head," urges Murray, "so you can taste
the sweetness behind it." The creaminess of the head, combined with Guinness'
relatively low acidity, creates the odd illusion that you're having some kind of rich
milkshake-like drink with a sweet palate but a dry finish.
*
The Guinness gizmo
FOR nearly 30 years, you could only get this sort of beer at bars using a special foaming
nozzle for their taps. Then, in 1988, Guinness invented the "widget," a
spherical gizmo that creates a surge of nitrogen bubbles when a can is opened. In 1999,
the company developed a rocket-shaped widget for the bottled version, designed to give a
mini surge every time the bottle is tipped, so the beer will have a draft taste. And in
the United Kingdom, Guinness recently brought out an even more techno way of stirring up
those tiny bubbles . an electrical gadget called the Surger that bombards a bottle with
ultrasonic waves.
This sort of thing makes Guinness a rather scientifically oriented brewery, particularly
for one that's 247 years old. Murray fits right in. Before studying to be a master
brewer in 1985, he had joined Guinness as a research chemist . he had a science degree
from Trinity College. Ten years later he was the master brewer, and he stayed on after
Guinness merged with the giant beverage firm Grand Metropolitan in 1997 to create Diageo,
which owns Smirnoff, Dom Perignon, Cuervo and scores of other brands.
Guinness drinkers have voted heavily for the nitrogenated version. However, Guinness Extra
Stout, the widget-less bottled brew that was the only kind of Guinness Americans knew for
decades, is still around.
Guinness was developed during the Colonial period to ship to thirsty British military
personnel. To survive the sea voyage, it was given a larger dose of hops and a higher
alcohol level. This brew caught on in West Africa, and in 1962 Guinness built a distillery
in Nigeria, now the largest market for Guinness after Ireland and the UK. Guinness, says
Murray, is brewed in 50 countries. The Guinness in the English, European and American
markets is still made in Dublin.
A worldwide beer empire based in Ireland. Well, the brewery's founder, Arthur
Guinness, did think big. When he took over the brewery property in 1759, he negotiated a
9,000-year lease for 45 pounds (about $79) a year.
So what does the landlord think of that deal now?
"That's a good question," says Murray. "In fact, I've never even
heard of anybody paying. I think the city of Dublin is the landlord, and I'd imagine
they're happy enough."
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* Dr. James Lee Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax 651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *