Bru Brewery II
Le Chéile Festival at Brú Brewery, Trim, Co. Meath
Bru Brewery Timelapse GoPro
Le Chéile Festival music night at Brú Brewery, Trim, Co. Meath.
Brú Brewery - Brú Ri (Irish Pale Ale) 5%
Brú Brewery - Brú Ri (Irish IPA) 5%
Brewed by Brú Brewery (Ireland)
Style: Premium Bitter/ESB
Trim, Ireland
Serve in English pint
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
bottle,regular
Irish Craft IPA
4 hop ale with a blast of citrus , floral scents on the nose.
Brú Rí is brewed with Irish malt and four different hops. It is a crisp, refreshingly bitter ale, with a blast of citrus, pine and floral scents on the nose. The legend of Brian Boru, the last High King of Ireland, was the inspiration behind the naming of this beer. Brú Rí is our very own King of Irish Beers. Brian Boru fought the Great Battle of Tara and was made King of Ireland at the Stone of Destiny on the nearby Hill of Tara outside of Trim, in County Meath.
Purchased
Bier Huis
Brú Brewery
Brú Brewery - Brú Dubh (Dry Irish Stout) 4.2%
Brú Brewery - Brú Dubh (Dry Irish Stout) 4.2%
Brewed by Brú Brewery (Ireland)
Style: Stout
Trim, Ireland
Serve in English pint, Shaker, Snifter
Brú Dubh is a traditional Dry Irish Stout, brewed using Irish Malt and a heavy first hop addition. Dubh is smooth with hints of chocolate, coffee and vanilla
Purchased
Bier Huis
Brú Brewery
Blacknight SME Awards: Brú Brewery (Grand Prix)
Brú Brewery from Trim, Co Meath took three awards, plus the Grand Prix at the 2016 Blacknight SME Awards!
Their secret? “Hard work and dedication, and a love of beer!”
11PM Somewhere Podcast Beer in Food The Br Rua Burger
The 11PM Somewhere Podcast presents the first in it's VideoBlog series called 'Craft Beer in My Food', where the intention is to show cool ways to use Irish Craft Beer in your every-day cooking.
The first Brewery is Brú Brewery from trim, County Meath using their Cascade hopped Rua Irish Red Ale.
11PM Somewhere Podcast website
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Brú Brewery -
Buy Me A Pint - Trim Castle,Meath Ireland
A kid yells at us to buy me a pint - it was 1am, we had been drinking, and it seemed just rather funny to us.
Flooded River Boyne, Trim, Co. Meath 17/08/2008
the Boyne flooded @ Newtown, Trim, Co. Meath 17/08/2008
The sound of a wine glass vs a pint of Guinness
the trick is to wet your finger with actual Guinness
music:
How to Build a Bar | This Old House
Senior technical editor Mark Powers builds a bar for entertaining. (See below for a shopping list and tools.)
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Shopping List for How to Build a Bar:
- Lauan to sheathe the outside of the bar. Get one-and-a-half 4-by-8-foot sheets.
- 1/2-inch birch-veneer plywood, to sheathe the interior. Get one-and-a-half 4-by-8 sheets.
- 3/4-inch utility-grade plywood, for the base of the bar. Get one 4-by-8 sheet.
- 1x4 common-pine boards, to be sandwiched between the sheathing. Get eight 8-footers.
- 1x4 clear-pine boards for the stiles and rails. Get seven 8-footers.
- 1x8 clear-pine board, for the bottom rail. Get one 8-footer.
- 1x10 clear-pine boards, for the shelves. Get two 6-footers.
- 1x2 for the capping and supports. Get one 6-foot common-pine board and one 8-foot clear-pine board.
- 1x1 for the shelf cleats. Get two 8-foot lengths.
- Panel or base cap molding, to trim the inside edges of the stiles and rails. Get six 6-foot pieces.
- 1x12 oak to finish the bar top.] Get one 10-foot board.
- 1x2 oak for the trim. Get one 12-foot board.
- Oak bar-rail molding. Get one 12-foot length.
- Foot rail, brackets, and caps] (optional)
- 1-inch nails
- 1 1/4-inch nails
- 5/8-inch brad nails
- 1 1/4-inch screws
- 3-inch screws
- Construction adhesive
- Wood glue
Tools for How to Build a Bar:
- Circular saw
- Miter saw
- Drill/driver fitted with a combination drill bit
- Pneumatic nail gun
- Small hand saw
About This Old House TV:
This Old House is the No. 1 multimedia home enthusiast brand, offering trusted information and expert advice through award-winning television, a highly regarded magazine, and an information-driven website. This Old House and Ask This Old House are produced by This Old House Ventures, LLC and are presented on PBS by WETA Washington, DC.
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How to Build a Bar | This Old House
What happens if you put BRAKE FLUID in your gas tank? (You'll be surprised!)
Time for another experiment.. We put two bottles of brake fluid in the gas tank of my beater.. the results are pretty shocking..
New AutoVlog Merch!
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A Writer at Work / The Legend of Annie Christmas / When the Mountain Fell
Amanda Randolph (September 2, 1896 -- August 24, 1967) was an American actress and singer. She was a native of Louisville, Kentucky, and was the older sister of actress Lillian Randolph. She was the first African-American performer to star in a regularly scheduled network television show, appearing in DuMont's The Laytons. This short-lived program was on the air two months in 1948.
Her film career began in 1936 with Black Network. She went on to do several Oscar Micheaux films, among them: Swing, Lying Lips and The Notorious Elinor Lee. Broadway roles in The Male Animal and Harlem Cavalcade soon followed. Around the same time, Randolph broke into radio, helped by people she met at The Clam House, who got her a CBS audition. She began working on various radio shows: Young Dr. Malone, Romance of Helen Trent and Big Sister. Amanda went on to become a regular cast member on Abie's Irish Rose, Kitty Foyle, and Miss Hattie with Ethel Barrymore, where she had the role of Venus. Amanda also appeared on Rudy Vallée's radio show and on Grand Central Station.
She continued working in films to the 1960s, and was one of the first black women to become a comedy favorite on television. She briefly starred in her own daytime musical TV program for DuMont, Amanda, during the 1948 - 1949 season, making her the first African-American woman with her own show on daytime television.[55][56] Randolph did not settle in California until 1949, when she earned a role in Sidney Poitier's No Way Out. Even though she was working in New York and her younger sister, Lillian, had been working in Hollywood for some time, newspapers often got the two sisters mixed up, doing a story on Amanda but with a photo of Lillian and vice-versa. She then became a regular on the top early black TV show of the decade, Amos 'n' Andy, as Sapphire's mother, Ramona Smith, from 1951 to 1953; she also played the same role for the show's radio version from 1951 to 1954.[57] Amanda was now working with her sister, Lillian, who played Madame Queen on the radio and television shows.[15] She was the star and titular character in Beulah from 1953 to 1954, assuming the role from Lillian. Randolph also did some work for radio in 1956, playing the role of the folk heroine Annie Christmas in The Legend of Annie Christmas. She also had a recurring role as Louise the maid on CBS's The Danny Thomas Show and appeared in the show's 1967 reunion. (The show was aired shortly after her death.) She guest starred on the NBC anthology series, The Barbara Stanwyck Show. In 1955, Amanda opened a restaurant in Los Angeles called Mama's Place, where she did the cooking.
Despite all her film and television work, Amanda found herself slightly short of the requirements for a much-needed Screen Actors Guild pension at age 70; both sisters struggled for roles in the late 1930s. A role was written for her to gain eligibility.
Billy Connolly Tells Just About the Funniest Story Ever
One of the most perfect moments, and biggest laughs, in the history of TV talk shows. From 'The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder' in 1998. More info below -
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Back story, for those who are interested:
I was a fan of Tom Snyder all through his stint on 'The Late Late Show' on CBS in the 1990s, and even back when he did NBC's 'Tomorrow Show' in the 1970s. The context here is that, during all that stretch of time (and even today), flatulence was a subject well beyond the bounds of acceptable taste for mainstream American TV, even in late night -- most shows and most performers, even lowbrow types, are too leery of being pegged as grossly sophomoric to ever touch it. Notice that at no time does Tom ever let the word 'fart' slip his own lips -- this is not normally something you'd see brought up on TV at all, let alone with the bluntness in play in this clip.
But Tom did have a soft spot for fart humor, and he was unusual in having the self-confidence and trust in his audience to let it be revealed now and then. Very occasionally, he might make an amused reference to backstage happenings involving a crew member 'breaking wind' -- or to his appreciation for the now-little-remembered Belle-Epoque 'fartiste' Le Petomane -- but he always did so with the extra dollop of caution you might affect when touching on such a hugely unclassy subject.
Then on this particular night, along came Billy Connolly, and with his total lack of inhibition, he blew the lid off this guilty pleasure.
Tom's stage manager was a guy named Mark Kennedy, who is the dude you can hear cracking up in the background. His off-camera cackles and interactions with Tom were part of the show's charm. As Billy strolls so offhandedly and fearlessly into this subject, you can see Tom sharing sideways glances again and again with Kennedy -- as if acknowledging that this is something they've always had fun joking about crudely between themselves, but never with such disregard for decorum on network TV.
In the course of these magical three minutes, Tom winds up momentarily casting aside his concern for decorum (Ah, the hell with it, this is just too much fun!) -- and by the end, he's telling a fart joke himself, and leaning forward in anticipation as Billy tells the coronation story.
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