It is easily the best mass market beer in the world. When you think about how much of that stuff they make, and the high level of quality at which they make it, it’s truly impressive.
Gents, your channel deserves a whole lot more views! Keep up the good work! Loved it! Great insight into an obviously amazing brewery. Thanks and cheers!
I am from New Zealand and I visited Guinness brewery but I never saw what you showed us .thank you for the tour. To make Guinnes you need to brew the roast Barley on its own and add to a pale ale recipe and boil again and it is top whole. It is just the way they do it. Brewers Arms New Zealand absolutely love your program.
I have toured Hook Norton, and I have toured Griffin (Fullers), breweries. Wonderful places to visit, but that scale you witnessed there, wow! Thanks for a great video.
I found your channel for the first time and couldn't believe you guys are at 5k subscribers. I sincerely feel you are destined to be huge and very much loved this video. Thank you for making it.
I've been using dave lines guinness extra recipe for years and its as near as be damned .. 7lb/2lb/1lb pale malt, flaked barley, roast barley with 1oz/3oz bullion/northern brewer.
@@Geterbrewed Could remove the flaked barley if pouring on on nitro. But the recipe does call for 10% roast barley so close enough to what was suggested in the video. @hugh are you cold steeping or fully/partially mashing the roast grains?
If you love what you do you'll never work a day in your life , our team do love this industry and we have alot of fun , but Graeme yeah he has an awesome role
I've never drunk Guinness but many people around me always talk about this drink because it tastes delicious, so I'm curious about the process of making this drink.
Yeah the 4 roasting drums where running whilst we where doing the tour , we knew the scale would be large but didn't foresee it being at such an incredible scale, I wouldn't want to be paying that energy bill forsure
I worked on the Guinness Park Royal brewery in London many years ago and was very sad when it shut down and I have also done work on the Rack system for Dublin but unfortunately never got to visit the Dublin brewery 😢
I was never fond of Draft Guinness when it started to be available. I preferred the pint Crown Corked bottles. I did get a yeast strarters from those bottles many years ago. It would be in the mid-60s when I was in guided tour of a local brewery Hanson Hardy of Kimberley Nottinghamshire. One of three local brewerys and also Bass easily available. The main mashing part was a little more agricultural than what you showed but the fermentation area was operating theatre like. On our way to another part of the tour we passed a sterile looking area full of stainless steel kit and I recall vividly the guide Mr Hanson himself sort of dismiss somewhat as the bit which was to make the new fangled Keg beer which women liked.
Great video and great tour of the brewery. Mind blowing scale. I was hoping you might ask Graham about flaked barley's role in the recipe. It seems to be commonplace with most "clone" recipes to aid with crispness and help give the creamy long lasting head. Also, I'm convinced they either cold steep the roasted barley or add very late in the mash as 10% seems to bring a lot of astringency for me. Cold steeping seems to eliminate that.
They don't use flaked barley or indeed any other crystal malts I did ask about this. The creamy head is definitely obtained from the nitrogen. I haven't had a chance to trial the recipe we got given but will do.
This was so good. Even though Guinness/Diageo is "big beer", it's still inspirational to the homebrewer. If anyone wants to know how important Guinness was to the community, they should read 'The Search for God and Guinness '. Guinness is an integral part of beer history.
Thanks so much Jeff, we weren't sure how this would be received but aimed to be transparent on our intentions to give back to the homebrew community and what Guinness has achieved in terms of beer history is phenomenal
@@Geterbrewed Guinness is big beer in two senses. They are owned by Diageo obviously, but anyone who has visited St James Gate will understand the history of the company and the community it forms a part of, so it's a big part of Dublin in that sense as well.
What a great video, and what a privilege for you. That Brewhouse No. 4 is like the Audi factory of brewing! I'm just waiting for Kegland to release a Fermzilla the size of that fermenter now. Cheers 🍺🇮🇪
I was wondering whether all the draught is the same liquid regardless of its destination? So when they put it in those tankers is it the same stuff that goes in the kegs, draught cans, nitrosurger cans?
Yeah same liquid for draft as in the can, only difference is the kegs are packaged in Dublin the cans are completed in Belfast so trucked up the road, you a Guinness fan?
@@Geterbrewed that’s awesome, thanks. I love it mate, definitely my favourite beer. A load of my family moved from Manchester to Comber when I was young so I grew up with it and never got tired of it.
Are the Pints served in the Gravity bar 16 oz. or 20 oz. ? I've seen some bars serve Guinness in the 16 oz. glass but charge you the 20 oz. price. The glass design is the same.
Loved this vlog, but also wondering if you'd consider making a 'Geterbrewed' all grain all in clone kit, maybe scalable as the homebrewers brew different batch sizes? I would definitely purchase. Keep up the content, images avid follower.
Thanks so much Dylan, we choose to direct people to the info on this so they could create the batch size that suited them via the custom grain kit : www.geterbrewed.com/customgrainkit/ We are nearing completion on a new website so will add more clone kits when that piece of work is complete
It's a shame about the yeast not being available. Back in the 1980s I used yeast from bottled Guinness when it was still sold with yeast in it ! as recommended by Dave Line.
I guess they need to keep some secrets to themselves but i don't think even if we had access to it that it that it would be any threat to them at the scale at which they operate. I think the flavour comes more from the roast malt
Spoiler, they blend in old beer maybe 4-6 months old, maybe oxidized on purpose. That is some of the tang/twang. Also some ph adjustment maybe. Back in the day it probably had some brett going on. Just about all beer did. It just didn't sit around much either. Probably gone in a week each batch. Some stories of kivik, scandanavien beer. Was made, then all drank up the next day. Or two at the most. It was a fun time back then. Very nutritious if others foods were scarce and not in season.
We didn't see any of that during the tour and with modern food standard accreditation i would say they would have a hard time explaining adding oxidised beer. Interesting point on the kviek , i wondered if the yeast thats so closely guarded could be a kviek strain? Given the turnaround times it seems like a possibility
Really irritating and unnecessary music all over this, but I guess what else is new with documentary bits. It is interesting to see the architecture - some truly beautiful brickwork and composition for the exteriors.
The Guinness of today (4.2* normally in the EU) tastes like water compared to the Guinness of the past. Being 60 years old I'm glad I was able to drink the traditional full-flavored Guinness that made the brand famous. Today's version is overpriced girly beer. I'm surprised they don't serve it with an umbrella nowadays.
Who here can invent the next generation of truly advanced wines, beers, and liquors? No liver damage. No fatty liver. No bloating or flatulence or burping. No sugar or carbohydrates. Better flavor. International access. Anyone???
My name is Patrick McNeill and I uz and my name was teddy palm and before that my name was teddy trimmer and 75 years ago my family name was O'Brien's and if you look at the Baptist college in Florida se books on theology you will see my name I got saved at gospel Baptist church in NH I live in Sarasota Florida
What about Lion, Castle, Hansa and Windhoek? Firm favourites for a shisa nyama An interesting fact about Guinness, about 40% of its global production is made and sold in Africa.
As much as I love Guinness, I must say the amount of false claims in this video is completely unnecessary! "The biggest brewery in the world" "The most technologically advanced brewery in the world" ... With just a tiny bit of research it is very easy to find out that those claims are absolutely false.
Thanks for your feedback. We have taken our tour guide and experience at face value and perhaps it would have been better worded as one of the biggest breweries and one of the most technologically advanced breweries. The site is the largest we have ever experienced , there would be no value in us making any false claims thats not our intention at all
Disappointed that as a business that supports independent brewers that you'd do a video on a multi million corporation that is literally the enemy of craft breweries. I love your shop and your videos lads but this one is way off the mark.
This video was for the homebrewers that want to clone a Guinness Recipe at home, being able to go behind the gates and talk to one of the brewers was an opportunity that we took to benefit our customers. The people we meet where genuine and very helpful and we do supply the open gate brewery with ingredients also. We invest alot into promoting independent breweries as you know and will continue to do all we can to promote them.
@@Geterbrewed And I think it is great that you give us a view of somewhere some of us will never get to see, a brand that is historically massive, and one of the many reasons people start their own brewing experiences, who then may go on/have gone on, to be local craft brewers.
I disagree. Guinness has a unique place in the history of brewing and I still think that they are in touch with craft beer. CBC did a video that defined craft beer as a race to the top rather than a race to the bottom and I feel Guinness still strive to achieve that.
It is easily the best mass market beer in the world. When you think about how much of that stuff they make, and the high level of quality at which they make it, it’s truly impressive.
Dee-lightful mate, my mouths waterin for a pint, God be with ye.
Gents, your channel deserves a whole lot more views! Keep up the good work! Loved it! Great insight into an obviously amazing brewery. Thanks and cheers!
Thanks so much, we enjoy making the videos for the channel and have some great plans for future content
Thanks for a great video. 👍 I enjoyed the tour. That is one amazing brewery!
I am from New Zealand and I visited Guinness brewery but I never saw what you showed us .thank you for the tour. To make Guinnes you need to brew the roast Barley on its own and add to a pale ale recipe and boil again and it is top whole. It is just the way they do it. Brewers Arms New Zealand absolutely love your program.
Thanks so much Les , yeah we haven't seen any other behind the scenes tours so it was a privilege to get such an opportunity
Nz makes there own Guinness
Hey mate. Got any more info on that? Fellow home brewer from NZ. Cheers
Thanks for this amazing Guiness tour video 😎👌🏾
That was a brilliant video, well done and thanks 😁🍻
Thanks so much
I'm a regular visitor to Dublin and you can't beat a pint of the black stuff in its home city. Fantastic!
Cheers Steve
I think Foreign export is superior to Guinness Draught and Guinness original
I have toured Hook Norton, and I have toured Griffin (Fullers), breweries. Wonderful places to visit, but that scale you witnessed there, wow! Thanks for a great video.
Thanks so much Darren , great experience glad we could share it
Hook Norton is one I would love to do.
I found your channel for the first time and couldn't believe you guys are at 5k subscribers. I sincerely feel you are destined to be huge and very much loved this video. Thank you for making it.
Thanks so much, we are trying our best and having alot of fun in the process
Great vid !
enjoyed watching and learned a few things too and I dont even live too far from the place lol
Nice one glad you enjoyed
I've been using dave lines guinness extra recipe for years and its as near as be damned .. 7lb/2lb/1lb pale malt, flaked barley, roast barley with 1oz/3oz bullion/northern brewer.
Do you pour on nitro?
@@Geterbrewed Could remove the flaked barley if pouring on on nitro. But the recipe does call for 10% roast barley so close enough to what was suggested in the video. @hugh are you cold steeping or fully/partially mashing the roast grains?
What yeast do u use to ferment it?
Until I watched this, I though Jonny had the best job in the world, that title now goes to Graeme! Great video as always.
If you love what you do you'll never work a day in your life , our team do love this industry and we have alot of fun , but Graeme yeah he has an awesome role
I've never drunk Guinness but many people around me always talk about this drink because it tastes delicious, so I'm curious about the process of making this drink.
Fantastic work. Well done ☘️☘️💪🏼
Thanks so much Sanjee!!
@@Geterbrewed You are welcome
Lots of history at tgat place..😊😊😊
Amazing, well done. Having roast a little of my own barley I know how much energy it takes to do it. Cant imagine there energy costs on that scale.
Yeah the 4 roasting drums where running whilst we where doing the tour , we knew the scale would be large but didn't foresee it being at such an incredible scale, I wouldn't want to be paying that energy bill forsure
What a great episode!!!
Thanks so much
It shows how privileged DiAgio are to own the Guinness Brand and brewery
Brilliant documentary!
Thanks so much
Fantastic watch!
Glad you like it!
Absolutely brilliant video tour . Thank you for this 👌🏻😀
I worked on the Guinness Park Royal brewery in London many years ago and was very sad when it shut down and I have also done work on the Rack system for Dublin but unfortunately never got to visit the Dublin brewery 😢
We tried our best to give everyone and insiders view with this video , hope you enjoyed
I was never fond of Draft Guinness when it started to be available. I preferred the pint Crown Corked bottles. I did get a yeast strarters from those bottles many years ago.
It would be in the mid-60s when I was in guided tour of a local brewery Hanson Hardy of Kimberley Nottinghamshire. One of three local brewerys and also Bass easily available.
The main mashing part was a little more agricultural than what you showed but the fermentation area was operating theatre like. On our way to another part of the tour we passed a sterile looking area full of stainless steel kit and I recall vividly the guide Mr Hanson himself sort of dismiss somewhat as the bit which was to make the new fangled Keg beer which women liked.
Such a great experience a brewery tour, thanks for sharing your experiences
The only beer I drink. Just had one. It's just so enjoyable.
Great video thanks for sharing 🍻
Great video and great tour of the brewery. Mind blowing scale. I was hoping you might ask Graham about flaked barley's role in the recipe. It seems to be commonplace with most "clone" recipes to aid with crispness and help give the creamy long lasting head. Also, I'm convinced they either cold steep the roasted barley or add very late in the mash as 10% seems to bring a lot of astringency for me. Cold steeping seems to eliminate that.
They don't use flaked barley or indeed any other crystal malts I did ask about this. The creamy head is definitely obtained from the nitrogen. I haven't had a chance to trial the recipe we got given but will do.
This was so good. Even though Guinness/Diageo is "big beer", it's still inspirational to the homebrewer. If anyone wants to know how important Guinness was to the community, they should read 'The Search for God and Guinness '. Guinness is an integral part of beer history.
Thanks so much Jeff, we weren't sure how this would be received but aimed to be transparent on our intentions to give back to the homebrew community and what Guinness has achieved in terms of beer history is phenomenal
@@Geterbrewed Guinness is big beer in two senses. They are owned by Diageo obviously, but anyone who has visited St James Gate will understand the history of the company and the community it forms a part of, so it's a big part of Dublin in that sense as well.
Considering how massive the production of Guinness is, to keep the quality and great consistency they all do a great job
What a great video, and what a privilege for you.
That Brewhouse No. 4 is like the Audi factory of brewing!
I'm just waiting for Kegland to release a Fermzilla the size of that fermenter now.
Cheers 🍺🇮🇪
Awesome vid :)
Thanks appreciate the compliment , Dillon who shoots and edits these video is extremely talented
I was wondering whether all the draught is the same liquid regardless of its destination? So when they put it in those tankers is it the same stuff that goes in the kegs, draught cans, nitrosurger cans?
Yeah same liquid for draft as in the can, only difference is the kegs are packaged in Dublin the cans are completed in Belfast so trucked up the road, you a Guinness fan?
@@Geterbrewed that’s awesome, thanks. I love it mate, definitely my favourite beer. A load of my family moved from Manchester to Comber when I was young so I grew up with it and never got tired of it.
@@MrVampireBill they have made it so drinkable , it appeals to such a wide demographic now
Are the Pints served in the Gravity bar 16 oz. or 20 oz. ?
I've seen some bars serve Guinness in the 16 oz. glass but charge you the 20 oz. price.
The glass design is the same.
I didn’t check at the time and can’t remember it being discussed
Great video, although I love real ale, you can’t beat the occasional Guinness and watching the quality checks you can see why it’s so consistent
Thanks so much
Some people love it and some don't like it. I am proud to say I love it. I always say to me its like mother's milk.
It's all in the water, yeast, and grain. Phenomenal recipe, nothing else is a Guiness.
Loved this vlog, but also wondering if you'd consider making a 'Geterbrewed' all grain all in clone kit, maybe scalable as the homebrewers brew different batch sizes? I would definitely purchase. Keep up the content, images avid follower.
Thanks so much Dylan, we choose to direct people to the info on this so they could create the batch size that suited them via the custom grain kit : www.geterbrewed.com/customgrainkit/ We are nearing completion on a new website so will add more clone kits when that piece of work is complete
With these tips I was finally able to create a perfect replica 100 percent!! Great job harvesting those secrets!
Nice one glad it was of help
Do you mind sharing that recipe?
@@MrDarrenbell09 sure checkout the blog here: www.geterbrewed.com/blog/2022/08/28/guinness-clone-recipe/
It's a shame about the yeast not being available.
Back in the 1980s I used yeast from bottled Guinness when it was still sold with yeast in it ! as recommended by Dave Line.
I guess they need to keep some secrets to themselves but i don't think even if we had access to it that it that it would be any threat to them at the scale at which they operate. I think the flavour comes more from the roast malt
@@Geterbrewed a lot of clone recipes also include about 10% flaked barley which I think helps with head retention.
@@Geterbrewed He did say use a clean ale yeast. I tried lager yeast before but i still prefer Irish ale. Thanks for the video, very interesting.
Great
Thankyou
22:07 putting the man on the spot I would have been like figure it out on your own.
Bit confusing you said all the beer was sent to Belfast but then you showed they keg on site?!
All kegs done in Dublin and cans in Belfast
Hey Paul, As Rob has mentioned the draft Guinness in keg is packaged in St James Gate and the small pack is sent to Belfast for packaging
I am new to brewing and I have a question, how can they make beer without malt ?
Yup. As history proves, “celt god creatid deh drignk, sews uss Eyerich, wooden take overrr dee werld” 🍻🍻🍻
Spoiler, they blend in old beer maybe 4-6 months old, maybe oxidized on purpose. That is some of the tang/twang. Also some ph adjustment maybe. Back in the day it probably had some brett going on. Just about all beer did. It just didn't sit around much either. Probably gone in a week each batch.
Some stories of kivik, scandanavien beer. Was made, then all drank up the next day. Or two at the most. It was a fun time back then. Very nutritious if others foods were scarce and not in season.
We didn't see any of that during the tour and with modern food standard accreditation i would say they would have a hard time explaining adding oxidised beer. Interesting point on the kviek , i wondered if the yeast thats so closely guarded could be a kviek strain? Given the turnaround times it seems like a possibility
What is the main heating source?
Who else draws a smiley face in the foam so they can kiss Mr. Guinness?
dont understand why you dont have alot more subscribers
Thanks for the comment, hopefully someday 🤣
From the top of croke park it looks like wonkas factory and from the bottom to remind you.
I like my Guinness chilled 😋
No flaked barley? I though that played a role in head retention for Guinness?
No not used
Which spray malt would you recommend for this? 400-500L range for the roast barley?
Drink half a Guinness every time he says "phenomenal" or "mind-boggling"... 🍻
Watching this while drinking a bottle of guinness draught
...will there be an ice cream Guinness?... 🤭🙏
You could def do a homemade version
@@Geterbrewed with my luck I'd only end up with wasted Guinness. Noooooo, not worth the chance. U won't cry over spilt milk, but Guinness...? 😂
“It’s on the wall there” 💀
insane, i barely make a batcha month xD
Interestingly the 3rd largest consumer of Guinness is Nigeria & 5th largest is Cameroon
Quit experimenting. You've got it allready. I am happy.
It's not 1.008 it's 1.006-1.002 more on the lower range
Really irritating and unnecessary music all over this, but I guess what else is new with documentary bits. It is interesting to see the architecture - some truly beautiful brickwork and composition for the exteriors.
The Guinness of today (4.2* normally in the EU) tastes like water compared to the Guinness of the past. Being 60 years old I'm glad I was able to drink the traditional full-flavored Guinness that made the brand famous. Today's version is overpriced girly beer. I'm surprised they don't serve it with an umbrella nowadays.
28.51 the guys half pint of Guinness that he’s holding at the bar looks awful. No cream at all on the glass
hello
Who here can invent the next generation of truly advanced wines, beers, and liquors? No liver damage. No fatty liver. No bloating or flatulence or burping. No sugar or carbohydrates. Better flavor. International access. Anyone???
4 million pints a day.....wtf😅
Guinness n black
My name is Patrick McNeill and I uz and my name was teddy palm and before that my name was teddy trimmer and 75 years ago my family name was O'Brien's and if you look at the Baptist college in Florida se books on theology you will see my name I got saved at gospel Baptist church in NH I live in Sarasota Florida
This beer must failed dismally in southern africa. Coz we only drink black label
What about Lion, Castle, Hansa and Windhoek? Firm favourites for a shisa nyama
An interesting fact about Guinness, about 40% of its global production is made and sold in Africa.
U stole the Book
As much as I love Guinness, I must say the amount of false claims in this video is completely unnecessary! "The biggest brewery in the world" "The most technologically advanced brewery in the world" ... With just a tiny bit of research it is very easy to find out that those claims are absolutely false.
Thanks for your feedback. We have taken our tour guide and experience at face value and perhaps it would have been better worded as one of the biggest breweries and one of the most technologically advanced breweries. The site is the largest we have ever experienced , there would be no value in us making any false claims thats not our intention at all
It's not beer it a stout
Disappointed that as a business that supports independent brewers that you'd do a video on a multi million corporation that is literally the enemy of craft breweries. I love your shop and your videos lads but this one is way off the mark.
This video was for the homebrewers that want to clone a Guinness Recipe at home, being able to go behind the gates and talk to one of the brewers was an opportunity that we took to benefit our customers. The people we meet where genuine and very helpful and we do supply the open gate brewery with ingredients also. We invest alot into promoting independent breweries as you know and will continue to do all we can to promote them.
As a stout drinker I found the video very interesting. Keep up the good work get er brewed. Hope your all well.
@@stephendoherty3444 thanks Stephen we are all great thanks , hope your doing well!
@@Geterbrewed And I think it is great that you give us a view of somewhere some of us will never get to see, a brand that is historically massive, and one of the many reasons people start their own brewing experiences, who then may go on/have gone on, to be local craft brewers.
I disagree. Guinness has a unique place in the history of brewing and I still think that they are in touch with craft beer. CBC did a video that defined craft beer as a race to the top rather than a race to the bottom and I feel Guinness still strive to achieve that.
Boring