Lymestone Brewery Tour, Real ale, Lymestone Brwery in Stone, Staffordshire. Brewery tour.
Business listings for Stafford UK. A tour of the Lymestone brewery in Stone, Staffordshire, including conversation with the master brewer and some tasting of the wonderful artisan ales.
Lymestone Stone The Crows By Lymestone Brewery | Craft Beer Review
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Lymestone Stone The Crows By Lymestone Brewery | Craft Beer Review
Lymestone Brewery - Stone The Crows (English Strong Ale) 5.4%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: English Strong Ale
Stone, England
Serve in English pint, Snifter
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
Cask; Regular. Also available bottled.
A rich red to black beer carefully crafted from the finest crystal and chocolate malts. Chewy juicy fruit flavours give way to a deep lingering bitterness provided by an abundance of Styrian Goldings, Millenium and Nugget hops.
Lymestone Brewery
Lymestone Brewery - Stone Dead (Foreign Stout) 6.66%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: Foreign Stout
Stone, England
Serve in English pint, Snifter, Tulip
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
Cask; Seasonal - Brewed for Halloween. Also available bottled.
You can Count on this rich, dark, imperial stout having enough bite for anyone looking to satisfy their thirst. Coffee, burnt toast and bitter fruits dominate whilst Styrian Goldings slowly seduce the palate.
Lymestone Brewery
Lymestone Brewery - Foundation Stone 4.5%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: Golden Ale/Blond Ale
Stone, England
Serve in English pint, Shaker
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
A 4.5%abv golden Indian Pale Ale
A glorious golden pale ale crafted from the finest pale and crystal malts. Faint biscuit and chewy, juicy citrus fruits burst onto the palate then spicy Boadicea and Pilot hops pepper the taste buds leaving a pleasing long and dry bitter finish.
Lymestone Brewery
Lymestone Brewery - Stone Brood (Honey Beer) 4.4%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: Bitter
Stone, England
Serve in English pint
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
Cask; Seasonal - October. Also available bottled all year round.
Up on the roof of the Lymestone Brewery, the Lymestone bees have been busy making the sweetest honey from local fields and gardens. Literally stung into action, Brad the Brewer has created this rich, dark beer from the Lymestone bees honey and the finest chocolate malt. Velvety chocolate gives way to a balanced bittersweet finish. Easy drinking and very moreish.
Lymestone Brewery
Opening the Medieval Stone Coffin Found at the Richard III Burial Site
University of Leicester Archaeologists open the mysterious lead coffin found buried just feet from the former grave of King Richard III. The coffin was discovered in in August 2013 – one year after the remains of the former King of England were unearthed.
Inside the lead coffin archaeologists found the skeleton of an elderly woman, who academics believe could have been an early benefactor of the friary – as radiocarbon dating shows she might have been buried not long after the church was completed in 1250 (although analysis shows her death could have taken place as late as 1400).
The high status female was in one of 10 graves discovered in the grounds of the medieval complex, including that of Richard III, six of which were left undisturbed. Those that were examined were all found to have female remains.
This film was produced by External Relations, University of Leicester.
Filmed & Edited by Carl Vivian
Lymestone Stone Faced By Lymestone Brewery | Craft beer Review
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Real Ale Guide's Stone Faced By Lymestone Brewery | Craft Beer Review
Penpont Brewery Tour.mp4
A 3 minute Tour of Penpont Brewery. Follow us on Facebook or Twitter.
penpontbrewery.co.uk
Lymestone Brewery Ein Stein | Craft Beer Review
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Real Ale Guide Reviews Ein Stein Ale By Lymestone Brewery | Craft Beer Review
CLIPSHAM QUARRY 1927
CLIPSHAM QUARRY
Clipsham (Nr Stamford), Lincolnshire, UK. 1927
Medwell's Quarry in Rutland, six miles north-east of Stamford, and renowned as a source of stone for architectural restoration. After blasting to remove the hard surface stone, all the work of extraction, splitting and shaping the white limestone is done laboriously by hand, the only mechanical aids being a hand-turned crane for lifting, horse-drawn trucks running on Jubilee track for on-site transport, and a steam lorry.
Accession no. 610
Total running time 4 min - B/W - 16mm - Silent
To find out more about the Film Archive collection visit:
Limestone Industry, 1940s - Film 49897
Late 1940s film about the limestone industry in England, including mining and limestone quarrying.
Egyptian pyramid. Ancient ruins that use stone. Rural west country of England. Monks rebuilding an abbey by hand. Building farm walls. Modern construction. Road surfaces. Sculpture. Locations of natural deposits by the coast. The creation of limestone. The Peak District. Lime kiln. Different uses. Man working the limestone out of a quarry face. A laboratory - chemical properties of the stone and the calcium products it produces in different solutions.
Lymestone Brewery - Stone Faced (Bitter) 4.0%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: Bitter
Stone, England
Serve in English pint
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
Cask; Regular. Als available bottled.
Pale and Dark Crystal Maris Otter malts unite to embrace a motherland of chewy toffee while fruits and berry flavours rush in. Styrian Goldings from the East and Nugget Hops from the West are allied in perfect harmony as pine and citrus hop flavours caress the taste buds.
Lymestone Brewery
Video: Handcrafted Ales | Oldershaw Brewery, Grantham UK
Our goal at Oldershaw Beers is to provide you, be you a publican or punter, a real beer afficionado or someone trying it out for the first time, with a wonderful range of real beers that you will come back to time after time.
Our small team of craft brewers use locally sourced ingredients where they can, and go further afield to find new flavours when they think that the wider world brings something extra to our beers.
In short we are about bringing you real beer that will delight and perhaps surprise you. All that we do, is to brew for you, the very best beer that we can.
We hope you enjoy it.
Oldershaw Beers. Lincolnshire's best brewed secret.
Distall / Kdss / Euro Slot KDSS Ltd / Kindell Red, @ stone Staffordshire
When life was good A great Company started off as Distall in Cannock and we evolved into something bigger KDSS and became a thriving business for a short time, we became a sister company with EUROSLOT, France,there where lots of changes in the company, thing just weren't working out for them, we became Kindell Red International Ltd and a battle to save the company was in progress, unfortunately the Battle was lost, A very very sad day.
Brewery Tour
We brought Beer Bingo winner Elemon down to London Fields Brewery to see where he will be helping create an upcoming beer. Brewery owner Jules gave us a great tour.
perfectpint.co.uk
GingRealAleTrail - Smithwick's | Lymestone Brewery
Diageo Ltd (St. James's Gate) Smithwick's Irish Ale 3.8%
Brewed by St. James’s Gate (Diageo)
Style: Irish Ale
Dublin, Ireland
Serve in English pint
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Lymestone Brewery - Stone The Crows 5.4%
Brewed by Lymestone
Style: English Strong Ale
Stone, England
Serve in English pint, Snifter
COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
Cask; Regular. Also available bottled.
A rich red to black beer carefully crafted from the finest crystal and chocolate malts. Chewy juicy fruit flavours give way to a deep lingering bitterness provided by an abundance of Styrian Goldings, Millenium and Nugget hops
Lymestone Brewery
Beer , Devon
Beer is a pretty coastal village that grew up around a smugglers' cove and caves which were once used to store contraband goods. These are now part of the attraction of the village. Many of the buildings are faced with flint, a hard glassy stone found in the local chalk rock.
Boats are winched up the beach as there is no harbour, and fresh fish is sold nearby. Nowadays small electrically driven winches using steel cables or tractors are located on the beach to haul boats in. Higher up is an old manual capstan operated by up to 20 men, now disused.
A WW2 pillbox is located close to the Western side of the beach exit, somewhat disguised by the stonework, the slits are still visible.
The shape of the coastline allowed local seafarers to operate in weather conditions when other towns could not, as it is protected from the prevailing westerly winds by Beer Head and the chalk cliffs which are the furthest outcrop of limestone on the SW coast.
Filmed with a DJI Phantom Quadcopter , GoPrp Hero3 Black camera and a cheap no brand name brushless gimbal.
Filmed at 1080p , 60fps.
BES Client Spotlight - Paul & Andrea Wealleans
We meet up with Paul & Andrea Wealleans at their microbrewery in Newcastle-under-Lyme and see how they started their business 'Weal Ales' with help from BES Local Enterprise Coach Martin Russell.
If you would like free advice and support to start your own business, get in touch with us at Business Enterprise Support. enterprisesupport.org
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The Enterprise Coaches in North Staffordshire project is part financed by the European Regional Development Fund Programme 2007 to 2013. The Department for Communities and Local Government is the managing authority for the European Regional Development Fund Programme, which is one of the funds established by the European Commission to help local areas stimulate their economic development by investing in projects which will support local businesses and create jobs. For more information visit communities.gov.uk/erdf
Lewis Kuber and Olive Moore Unloading Stone on the Fox River
In the Port of Green Bay, Wisconsin, on the Fox River, the barge Lewis J Kuber, with tug Olive L Moore, are unloading limestone. They arrived in port about 6am. I arrived about 10:30 am to see them unloading.
The Lewis J Kuber is a self unloading barge, formerly named Buckeye. For a full history of this boat, go to the BoatNerd website:
The Olive L Moore is a push tug, the power unit of this pair. Again a full history of this tug is at BoatNerd.com at:
I've been interested in shipping on the Great Lakes for as long as I can remember. Probably due to stories that I heard as a young boy about my great grandfather who was a sailor on the lakes from the 1870s until his death in 1909.
You can see in this video, the Kuber / Moore unloading, being refueled and finally turning in the Fox River and leaveing Green Bay. I don't know exactly how many truck loads of fuel were taken on, I counted two tanker trucks, but I suspect there were more, because of the amount of time they were refueling. That took a couple hours. According to my great grandfather's 1906 to 1908 log books (which I have) he used to refuel with coal in well under an hour, always in the St Mary's river at Detour MI.
YouTube safe Music in this video is from:
the tunes are:
Sailors Lament, Smooth Sailing, BeBop25, Dolphins Galaxia, Big Swing Band, Cryin In my Beer