Beers of the World
Subscribe to Beers of the World
Beers of the World Homepage
Subscribe to Beers of the World
Beers of the World Magazine
Beer and Ale Brands
Beer Directory
Beer Store
Beer Forum and Chat
Beer Links
Contact Beers of the World
Sitemap
 

Beers of the World is written by the leading beer writers of our time, and will cover all the beers of the world - ale and lager, from the UK and Germany, the Czech Republic, US and beyond.

Subscribe online and save up to 25%

Subscribe online now and save 25% on the recommended price.

Welcome back (Edit your profile) Sunday 18th May 2008 - 1:23 AM BST
Beers of the World Issue 1

Published in Beers of the World Issue 1 on 26/08/2005.

This article is 35 months old and some information provided may be time sensitive. Please check all details of events, tours, opening times and other information before travelling or making arrangements.

Copyright Beers of the World © 1999-2008. All rights reserved. To use or reproduce part or all of this article please contact us for details of how you can do so legally.

Vive la difference!

The phrase 'continental culture' is becoming commonplace. Is there a continental style, or do Europeans all approach beer in different ways? Andrew Burnyeat reports

London Lord Mayor Ken Livingstone would love it. If he were French, closing time would be a matter for him.

When he’s finished his drink, that’s it, everybody goes home. (Not really – but the Mayor does have a big say over late licence extensions and when nightclubs can close.) Bars generally close around 1am, but some stay open as late as 3am, while clubs stay open until 5am.

The French drink their beer out of 25cl or 33cl glasses. If you put a pint in front of them they’d probably feel like a child faced with a Supersize burger.

The thing is, though, the French drink a surprisingly large amount of beer – but without the problems associated with the English - probably because they have more drinking time.

Oddly, seven out of every 10 glasses of beer is consumed at home in France; the reverse of the British situation.

This represents one example of how just different various drinking cultures can be.

Despite the short hop from Britain to the Continent, the fact that European beers are commonplace in Britain, and the evidence that globalisation is making our world increasingly homogenous, the world of beer reveals some huge differences in drinking culture.

Just look at the differences between France and its neighbours. France has its world-famous wine industry, and many French people prefer it to beer. But over the border from France in Belgium, wine is a four-letter word (okay it’s vin, which is three letters, but you get the drift).

Brasseries and cafés are full of .....

To read the rest of this article you can buy this issue or subscribe to Beers of the World to have every issue delivered direct to your door.

By Andrew Burnyeat

Section : Beer Trends

Page number : 40


 
Home | Subscribe | Magazine | Brands | Directory | Store | Forum | Links | Contact | Sitemap
Published by Paragraph Publishing Ltd © 2005
Beers of the World | Whisky Magazine | Whisky Live | Scotland Magazine | World Whiskies Conference