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Перевод: cask
[существительное] бочка ; бочонок ; [глагол] разливать в бочки
Тезаурус:
- When the pub landlord or cellarman considers that the beer is ready to serve - it is said to have "dropped bright" with the sediment of yeast in the belly of the cask, and to have matured sufficiently - a long plastic tube is connected to the tap and the beer is ready to be pulled to the bar.
- Although no extraneous gas is used, CAMRA also frowns on the breather as interfering with the natural process of maturing and serving cask beer.
- While handpumps are now widespread in Scotland, as Fact Sheet 3 shows, the traditional method of serving cask beer in Scotland is the tall fount primed by air pressure.
- There are two ways in which cask beer can be stored that interfere with the vital secondary fermentation.
- The ideal temperature for serving a cask beer is 14C (57F).
- There was a real fear that cask ale, Britain's unique contribution to the world of beer, could be drowned in a rising tide of cold, fizzy keg.
- An experienced cellarman checking a cask of ale to make sure that the beer has "dropped bright" and is ready to be served.
- A cask has two holes, the tap hole at one of the flat ends to which a tap and pipe are attached, and a bigger shive hole on top.
- It is estimated that keg beer is twice as profitable as cask beer, lager four times as profitable.
- It is run or racked into casks, made either of wood or metal, sometimes with some "priming" sugar and a handful of dry hops: the sugar will encourage a vigorous secondary fermentation in the cask and the hops will add a delightful aroma.
- A number of brewers now use a device called a cask breather on low volume beers to prolong their life.
- The cask is laid on a cradle on its side to encourage the sediment to sink to the belly.
- Instead of a secondary fermentation in the cask to add a full, mature palate, keg beers are killed off in the brewery by a number of unnatural processes that affect the taste and quality of the product.
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