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13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer
for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. |
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"Hoos" wrote in message
news ![]() 13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Probably intended for American troops. Brits like their beer warm. |
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In article ,
"Byker" wrote: "Hoos" wrote in message news ![]() 13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Probably intended for American troops. Brits like their beer warm. They really don't like it warm, but they have Lucas refrigerators. |
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On 16 Jan 2014 14:52:55 GMT, Hoos wrote:
13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Great stuff! Thanks for posting it! |
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Op Sat, 18 Jan 2014 08:06:19 -0800, schreef Charles Lindbergh:
On 16 Jan 2014 14:52:55 GMT, Hoos wrote: 13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Great stuff! Thanks for posting it! My pleasure... |
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On 16/01/2014 17:40, Byker wrote:
"Hoos" wrote in message news ![]() 13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Probably intended for American troops. Brits like their beer warm. A base canard (that's not a French duck with a deep voice, BTW). Proper British beer is best served at cellar temperature (approx. 13°C/55°F) to keep it fermenting and to develop the flavour. Perhaps that is warm compared with US practice, but then US beer in general isn't known for having any flavour at all. For information about beer-carrying fighters, Google 'Modification XXX', XXX being the brewers' mark for Extra Strong. One such article is at http://spitfiresite.com/2012/01/modi...spitfires.html Cheers! -- Peter |
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On 19/01/2014 11:02, Ramsman wrote:
On 16/01/2014 17:40, Byker wrote: "Hoos" wrote in message news ![]() 13 June 1944: An English brewery donates a sizable amount of fresh beer for the troops fighting in Normandy and a unique delivery method is created, strapping kegs to the underwings of Spitfires being shipped to forward airfields. Flying at 12 000 feet chills the brew to perfection. Probably intended for American troops. Brits like their beer warm. A base canard (that's not a French duck with a deep voice, BTW). Proper British beer is best served at cellar temperature (approx. 13°C/55°F) to keep it fermenting and to develop the flavour. Perhaps that is warm compared with US practice, but then US beer in general isn't known for having any flavour at all. Well, that's a bit unfair. Many American beers do have some flavour. Unfortunately, the only way to make drinkable is to chill the guts out of it so you can't taste it. For information about beer-carrying fighters, Google 'Modification XXX', XXX being the brewers' mark for Extra Strong. One such article is at http://spitfiresite.com/2012/01/modi...spitfires.html Cheers! -- Out of my way you plebs! |
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