Fellow Beer Lovers, |
http://www.springer.com/us/book/9789400777866 |
Sounds great. I am actually quite interested in your first book, but as typical with academic tomes these days, wow, pricy! |
I can help with Israel. |
You forget the Netherlands! |
If you’re interested in London, drop me a message. |
It would help to know what your focus is. Obviously 2-3 days in each country is going to impose pretty hefty limitations - in scope and geographically. |
Originally posted by Countbeer We just returned from the Netherlands. We visited Gulpener Bierbrouwerij, Grolsch Brewery, Brouwerij ’t IJ, Brouwerij de Prael, The Fiddler pub (The Hague), The Dutch Beer Tasting Festival and of course, the Heineken Experience. Please tell us what we missed, as we are certain there are gems we did not discover. Thanks! |
Originally posted by chriso We are writing an Atlas. The maps and infographics will be created at home (in the US), so our primary tasks while traveling are to take photos of each place and to write beer related stories that brewers/bartenders/patrons/beer lovers tell us. We are looking for stories that pertain to the place, are unique, leaves the reader saying "that was interesting" or "I never knew that", and can be summarized in 200 words. Perhaps beer folklore would be a good way to describe the types of stories we are seeking. Here is an example from: http://nlbeerhistory.com/ During the period that followed the Second World War, beer advertising became big business. Across North America, brewers jockeyed for the beer dollars of the rapidly growing cohort of baby boomers by illustrating how their beers were part of a healthy image of domesticity or a youthful and active product. In Newfoundland, however, one of the most successful kinds of advertising was the songbook. Newfoundland Songs, published in ten editions between 1950 and 1977, showcased the songs of Newfoundland to sell cases of Dominion Ale. Found within cases of Bennett Brewing and later (after 1962) Carling O’Keefe products, the songbook played with nostalgia write the Bennett brand deeper into Newfoundland’s history. We hope this gives our work and what we are looking for more context. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Mark and Nancy |
Unfortunately your not going to find much in Ghana, outside of Guinness, and Club or Star Lager. |
Originally posted by BeerDoctors Depends on what you were looking for I guess. But as a local, I would have adviced Van Moll brewpub, De Molen, Borefts beer festival and some small breweries and bars probably. Assuming you would get input for Amsterdam from others or would have checked that yourself. |
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