Brewed under licence in the UK

Brewed under licence in the UK

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Zio Di Roma

Original Poster:

656 posts

44 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all


I had some Angelo Poretti in Naples and it tasted like nectar. I am drinking a bottle of it as I type and it tastes rubbish. It's the brewed in the UK version.

The same is true of other beers I have tried.

Is it a universal truth that beers brewed under licence in the UK don't taste as good as the originals?






595Heaven

2,765 posts

90 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Yes, in my experience

PT1984

2,779 posts

195 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Yep. Typically different strength too. Morrisons are good for beers at the moment. This lot was only £7.50. I was sozzled!



The Aldi /Lidl Rheinbacher Pilsner / Perlenbacher Pilsner are great too.

borcy

6,904 posts

68 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
I think it's the different water here or perhaps different ingredients?

Zio Di Roma

Original Poster:

656 posts

44 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
PT1984 said:
Yep. Typically different strength too. Morrisons are good for beers at the moment. This lot was only £7.50. I was sozzled!



The Aldi /Lidl Rheinbacher Pilsner / Perlenbacher Pilsner are great too.
Chouffe is my all time fave. I THINK it is still brewed in Belgium. But I cannot drink it if I want to remain awake.

BrabusMog

20,786 posts

198 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Spanish San Miguel is delicious, the brewed in the UK stuff is not even close to tasting the same which is why I stick to Polish lager most of the time unless Peroni is on offer at Tesco.

Zio Di Roma

Original Poster:

656 posts

44 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all

The consensus seems to be that Brewed under licence in the UK = not as good.

Why is it then that the originals are not imported?

BrabusMog

20,786 posts

198 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Some off licences do import stuff that isn't brewed in the UK, my local one gets the Spanish San Miguel in from time to time and most Polish stuff other than Tyskie and Lech which is brewed in the UK.

Edited as I'd had a couple of Perla's this evening biggrin

Edited by BrabusMog on Saturday 22 March 19:32

a340driver

468 posts

167 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Don't beers always taste better at home? I love the odd lager in Turkey but hate it at home.

Maybe it's the fact it's freezing and I'm hot?

Plus I'm not going for Turkey Teeth and head plantations.

PT1984

2,779 posts

195 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Zio Di Roma said:
The consensus seems to be that Brewed under licence in the UK = not as good.

Why is it then that the originals are not imported?
Is it not because of the tax. Higher ABV = more tax.

fttm

4,000 posts

147 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Water source makes a huge difference

borcy

6,904 posts

68 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Zio Di Roma said:
The consensus seems to be that Brewed under licence in the UK = not as good.

Why is it then that the originals are not imported?
Glass and water is pretty expensive to move long distances especially for something that is fairly low sale price.

bristolracer

5,701 posts

161 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Zio Di Roma said:
Why is it then that the originals are not imported?
Because you get very few bottles on a 40 ton lorry. It gets very expensive to transport the hundreds of thousands of bottles and cans that are consumed every week.
A lot of the wine we drink in this country is often bottled here but arrives in big plastic bags inside ships.
Far cheaper to make beer in the big big Burton on Trent beer factory and slap a fancy foreign label on it and charge a fancy price for glorified Carling black label.

Beer and wine are always better at their place of origin.

Mont Blanc

1,871 posts

55 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
borcy said:
Zio Di Roma said:
The consensus seems to be that Brewed under licence in the UK = not as good.

Why is it then that the originals are not imported?
Glass and water is pretty expensive to move long distances especially for something that is fairly low sale price.
That would be my guess. Brewing and bottling it here is likely far more profitable than brewing it in Spain/Italy etc and moving vast quantities of it 1000-1500 miles.

But in answer to the original question, I would agree that 'brewed under licence' always results in a noticeably worse beer than the original.

brightmotiv

145 posts

63 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
This vid sums it up: https://youtu.be/PkYLH5aW_VQ?si=Hj1yq1Xr-0UQT_ds

British brewed often means Burton on trent = hard water

dickymint

26,783 posts

270 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
brightmotiv said:
This vid sums it up: https://youtu.be/PkYLH5aW_VQ?si=Hj1yq1Xr-0UQT_ds

British brewed often means Burton on trent = hard water
IF that were the case then the brewers would know about it and 'soften' their water to suit nuts

Silvanus

6,747 posts

35 months

Sunday 23rd March
quotequote all
dickymint said:
brightmotiv said:
This vid sums it up: https://youtu.be/PkYLH5aW_VQ?si=Hj1yq1Xr-0UQT_ds

British brewed often means Burton on trent = hard water
IF that were the case then the brewers would know about it and 'soften' their water to suit nuts
Why bother, some of the brewed under license stuff are amongst the best selling beers in the UK. I think a lot of people wouldn't have a clue what they're drinking.

dickymint

26,783 posts

270 months

Sunday 23rd March
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
dickymint said:
brightmotiv said:
This vid sums it up: https://youtu.be/PkYLH5aW_VQ?si=Hj1yq1Xr-0UQT_ds

British brewed often means Burton on trent = hard water
IF that were the case then the brewers would know about it and 'soften' their water to suit nuts
Why bother, some of the brewed under license stuff are amongst the best selling beers in the UK. I think a lot of people wouldn't have a clue what they're drinking.
That’s sort of what I’m saying. It’s mostly a load a load of pretentious bks wink

PhilAsia

5,453 posts

87 months

Sunday 23rd March
quotequote all
borcy said:
I think it's the different water here or perhaps different ingredients?
Along those lines... I was informed that many years ago, Carlsberg(?) built a factory here in Manila, but then closed it later after they found out that it was being used to make Tiger beer(?).

LooneyTunes

8,088 posts

170 months

Sunday 23rd March
quotequote all
dickymint said:
brightmotiv said:
This vid sums it up: https://youtu.be/PkYLH5aW_VQ?si=Hj1yq1Xr-0UQT_ds

British brewed often means Burton on trent = hard water
IF that were the case then the brewers would know about it and 'soften' their water to suit nuts
Water isn’t just about “hard” vs “soft”…

But I’d agree that “brewed in the UK” foreign beers aren’t necessarily great if you happen to like the originals (which a decent percentage of drinkers won’t actually have ever tried).