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Good times will be pouring in Kilmarnock next weekend
Good times will be pouring in Kilmarnock next weekend

Daily Record

time28-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

Good times will be pouring in Kilmarnock next weekend

The event will take place on the grounds beside Rugby Park. Organisers of next weekend's inaugural Kilmarnock Beer Festival have unveiled a special beer for the occasion. And after months of hard graft and promotion, they say they 'can't wait' to welcome punters through the gates of Rugby Park. ‌ The team behind the event were 'delighted' to have worked with Black Isle Brew to come up with Killie's own beer for the day, Squirrel Helles. ‌ Organiser Fraser Wilson told Ayrshire Live: 'It's brilliant to be able to tell the people of Killie they have their own beer for the day and we really hope festival-goers give it a try. 'Black Isle are one of Scotland's best brewers and the Helles lager is a really refreshing session drink - one we expect to be a hit with craft beer lovers and non-craft beer lovers alike.' This limited-edition lager will be available at The Taproom bar where you can also get your hands on the popular St Mungo's lager by WEST and a seasonal German Radler. Fraser added: 'Every summer Schofferhoffer do a limited run of their Radler and it's one of the highlights of the year for beer enthusiasts. 'The 2025 summer flavour is Tropical and it tastes amazing – think passionfruit and mangoes. It's a low percentage wheat beer cut with fresh fruit juice and is the ideal beer to have with your mates in the sun.' Over 1500 thirsty beer lovers are set to descend on the grounds of Rugby Park stadium, with organisers hopeful the event will be a welcome boost to the local economy. ‌ Counting down the hours, Fraser added: 'Like a shaken can of IPA, we're about ready to burst - I just wish it was here already. 'There's been a lot of work gone into this and a lot of effort in trying to make it something Kilmarnock can be proud of. There's definitely nerves and anxiety surrounding the event, but we're confident that's something we've achieved. A different event to what you'd expect to see at Rugby Park on a Saturday, the June 7 'swally' runs from 12pm-7pm and will showcase the best of independent Scottish beer, gin, cocktails, wine and fantastic street food. ‌ The tasty suds and spuds will be supported with a fantastic line-up of live music. That will see newly signed Ayrshire singer, Kayleigh, perform with covers band, Underdog, also taking to the stage. Edinburgh trad singers, The Greasy Whiskers, will play throughout the day, with the day's entertainment headlined by DJ Kevin Spalding, better known as Let's Get Eclectic. ‌ Pouring pints at the festival will be Dookit, Outlandish, Simple Things Fermentation, Two Towns Down, and Tempest breweries. They'll be joined by fellow brewers from Sulwath, Five Kingdoms, Winton Brewery, and Williams Bros. For non-beer lovers, Angels Dare Cocktails, The Dispensary Bar, EspressoKart, The Little Margarita Truck and Panther Milk will be in attendance. ‌ Champer Camper will be taking care of the weekend's fizz and Ayrshire very own Ayrshire Riviera will be serving crisp, refreshing cider. There will also be a dedicated gin and tonic bar from the team at The Orry Botanical Gin and another from the Agronomist. Food vendors will be serving up the Killie gyros , tacos, BBQ, smash burgers, fish & chips, pizza and cheesecake.

New S.F. beer garden opens on the waterfront
New S.F. beer garden opens on the waterfront

San Francisco Chronicle​

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

New S.F. beer garden opens on the waterfront

A long-awaited San Francisco beer garden is opening on the waterfront just in time for summer. Humble Sea Brewing Co. opens its Pier 39 location on Friday, the brewery announced on Instagram. The taproom and beer garden will pour the label's IPAs, Helles and other fresh beers just steps away from the pier's lounging sea lions. Humble Sea opened in Santa Cruz in 2015, becoming one of Northern California's most popular craft beer companies. It is best known for its 'foggy IPAs,' the company's name for hazy IPAs, and its tall cans with colorful cartoons and artwork. Humble Sea announced the Pier 39 location last April, with original plans to open by the end of last summer. The San Francisco taproom is the latest in Humble Sea's lineup and part of a revitalization at the waterfront entertainment center. It operates three Santa Cruz area taprooms. It expanded to Pacifica in 2021 and launched an Alameda location in 2023. A representative for the brewery did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Germany's lesser-known beers that are worth a try
Germany's lesser-known beers that are worth a try

Local Germany

time23-04-2025

  • General
  • Local Germany

Germany's lesser-known beers that are worth a try

April 23rd is Germany's national beer day. As opposed to international beer day, which is celebrated in August, Germany's beer day is set on this date to commemorate the passage of the Reinheitsgebot (or the Purity Law) on April 23rd, 1516. The Purity Law stated that beer may only consist of water, malt, hops and yeast. Germany is home to around 6,000 different beers, according to a report by RND, and to recommend any of them above the others is sure to invite some serious backlash among German aficionados. As to my own credentials, I won't claim to be an expert, but I have drunk nearly 400 different German beers since I arrived in Germany, and I kept track of the good and the bad with a rating app. READ ALSO: 365 German beers - What I learned from drinking a different variety each day So, based on my own exploration of German beers, here are a few suggestions of some good, and lesser-known, brews that you could crack open to celebrate this special day. When in Bavaria While the whole country of Germany is known for its beer, Bavaria has really done some heavy lifting to build that reputation and keep it alive. Munich's Oktoberfest is the largest beer-drinking festival in the world, and a Lederhosen- wearing German with a litre of Helles in hand is undoubtedly the image that comes to mind for most people outside of the country when they think of German beer. Thanks in no small part to the aforementioned Reinheitsgebot (which originated in Bavaria) the Free State's most popular beers are classic types made by a handful of established breweries. By and large Bavaria is not the place to come looking for innovative, new craft breweries. It's where you come to find pure beer that's been brewed in the same way, and served in the same biergartens for centuries. A perfect, and somewhat lesser-known example of this is Kloster Andechs. Benedictine monks have been brewing beer at the Andechs Monastery since 1455. A more recent up-and-comer is the Giesinger Brewery. Founded in 2007, Giesinger has quickly become a local favourite around the Bavarian capital, but interestingly the Association of Munich Breweries has so far managed to prevent it from being called a 'Münchner Bier' or from being sold at Oktoberfest. Advertisement Not too far to the north, the Franconian region is home to its own collection of breweries. I've heard it said that upper Franconia is home to the highest number of breweries per capita in the world , but I've also seen other sources give that title to other places. One thing that's certain however, is that you could taste beers for a lifetime around here. Nuremberg is famous for its Rotbier (red beer) which get their colour from being stored in old wine barrels. One of my favourite German beers is the Nürnberger Rotbier by Hausbrauerei Altstadhof, which you can visit near the base of the city's castle. The Hertl brewery from this region is also worth a mention. If you are in the mood for something different, try Hertl's 'Schwiegervater's Stolz', which is their take on a smoked beer – a unique type that is especially popular in Bamberg. The classic Bamberg Rauchbier to try is called Aecht Schlenkerla – either the Märzen (Festbier) or the Urbock. READ ALSO: Travel in Germany - Sipping smoked beer and soaking up culture in beautiful Bamberg Advertisement When in Berlin Berlin's classic beers are all pretty plain pilsners, such as the well-known Berliner Pilsener or Kindl. But the German capital is also home to a number of smaller breweries that have started to gain some notoriety – at least in the local scene – and increasingly it's also home to some interesting craft breweries. A glass of beer rests on the counter at Eschenbräu in Berlin's Wedding neighbourhood. Photo: picture alliance / dpa | Henrik Josef Boerger BRLO is probably the Berlin craft brewery with the widest name recognition, but for something a little more interesting I'd say head to Eschenbräu or Vagabund - both based in the district of Wedding - instead. These both offer some of their own craft recipes as well as their takes on the German classics. In my opinion these smaller breweries feel a bit more authentic, and serve fresher tasting beers than the larger generic-feeling breweries. Advertisement Fuerst Wiacek is a Berlin-based micro brewery creating the kinds of uniquely branded recipes that would give even the wildest California-breweries a run for their money. This one doesn't have its own brick-and-mortar location, but you can find it at a number of bars and shops in Berlin and elsewhere. Another great Berlin-based brewery is Quartermeister, which has set itself the task of being the first beer 'for the common good', meaning the company is organised as a social enterprise and also supports local projects. Oh, and their beers are all really tasty of course!

Palestinians starve as Israel continues full ban on humanitarian aid
Palestinians starve as Israel continues full ban on humanitarian aid

Middle East Eye

time29-03-2025

  • General
  • Middle East Eye

Palestinians starve as Israel continues full ban on humanitarian aid

Huda Helles enjoyed a brief respite during the first days of the latest two-month ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. She lived with her family of eight in a makeshift tent in Al-Wihda Street, central Gaza City, after their house in Al-Shujaiya was bombed by an Israeli air strike in 2023. She and her family had a plan for the various dishes they wanted to cook during Ramadan. That plan was turned upside down on 2 March, when Israel closed the borders, halting the entry of all humanitarian aid, food, and goods into Gaza. The renewed blockade has brought the enclave to the brink of famine once again. 'We used to cook a variety of dishes every day, but now, for over 20 days, all we've had is rice,' Huda said. 'Now it's starting to give me severe stomach cramps.' On Wednesday, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, said in its latest update that Israel's ban on entry of aid has continued for nearly a month and that no aid entered the enclave throughout this period. All requests by humanitarian agencies to coordinate access with Israeli authorities have been denied. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Moreover, Israeli attacks killed eight humanitarian workers since its unilateral decision to resume hostilities on Gaza on 18 March, bringing the total number of aid workers killed by the Israeli army in Gaza to 399, OCHA said. Helles recalled when the blockade was imposed. The shops were empty within hours, and what was left was too expensive, she said. Even the charity distributions, which once offered a variety of meals, have dwindled, now providing only small servings of rice at the time of Iftar. An elderly man moves with a walker past rubble along a broken road as people displaced by conflict from Beit Lahia arrive in Gaza City on 22 March 2025 (AFP) After days of eating little more than rice, Huda couldn't sleep at night, suffering from severe stomach pain and colic. She was diagnosed with a stomach infection two weeks ago. 'Doctors advised me to eat healthy food and avoid canned goods,' she said. 'But there's nothing else to eat except the low-quality charity distribution. I am surviving on eating only bread and cheese, when possible.' Helles's mother, Manal, 52, was also supposed to eat healthy food. She suffered a heart attack and high blood pressure at the beginning of this month. Huda thinks that the main reason for her mother's deteriorating health is living in the harsh conditions in the tents, including the dire lack of food and clean water for drinking. 'During Ramadan, my mother used to prepare a beautiful spread of chicken, meat, and vegetables, carefully preparing each dish for the family,' Huda recalled. 'Now, she looks at us helplessly, asking us to hang on, hoping that the starvation will not last much longer.' 'We lived on canned hummus' Before the ceasefire, Huda and her family had been displaced to Khan Younis, in the southern part of Gaza. 'We were not able to find a piece of bread. For two months, we lived only on canned hummus.' 'We no longer have the energy to flee from one place to another, fetch water, or even recover from wounds due to the lack of food and medical care' - Ahmed Ramda During the ceasefire, Huda and her family feared the return of war and the famine that would inevitably follow. And that is what has happened. 'It's unfair to live in starvation again,' she said. Ahmed Ramda, 38, also struggles to find something to eat or feed his four children during Israel's current complete blockade on the entry of humanitarian aid, including food. He thinks that the blockade's impact is even worse than last year. 'We no longer have the energy to flee from one place to another, fetch water, or even recover from wounds due to the lack of food and medical care,' he said. 'They want us to be homeless, reliant on limited humanitarian aid, but all we want is for the borders to open so we can work, make a living, and live in peace.' He was once a driver, but his car was bombed by Israeli air strikes in November 2023 while he and his family were evacuating. His house was also destroyed, his father killed, and many other family members were wounded. Now, Ramda and his family live in a tent on Omar Al-Mukhtar Street in central Gaza. UN experts condemn Israel's renewed 'weaponised starvation' in Gaza Read More » 'My children cry every day, refusing to eat the lentils or rice from the charity distributions. They ask me for chicken, meat, and fruits,' Ahmed said. 'Their mother even lied to them, telling them she put minced meat in the food, but it melted while cooking.' 'I wish to be dead before the moment I see my children starve to death.' In January 2024, Ramda and his wife, Sana, welcomed their baby girl, Misk, into the world in their displacement tent in Deir al-Balah, in the middle of the Gaza Strip. However, due to the lack of proper nutrition, Sana had a difficult time breastfeeding Misk. Tragically, Misk died of malnutrition in August 2024. 'Sana struggled to breastfeed Misk due to the lack of healthy food and because we couldn't afford what was available in the markets,' Ramda explained through tears. Meanwhile, his 10-year-old daughter, Jori, has been battling dehydration. 'I lost one daughter, and I'm terrified of losing another before the borders open and we get food,' he said. 'I appeal to the world to end our suffering - not for us, the adults, but for the sake of our children, who are deprived of their most basic rights. "If the borders open, I hope to flee Gaza, seeking a new life in Norway or Belgium, where I can find a job and live in peace with my family." 'We want the war to end' Mazen Marouf, 48, a farmer, struggles to survive with his 11-member family. During the ceasefire, he and his six sons had planted tomatoes and onions on their farmland in Beit Lahia, hoping to feed themselves and make a living from their crops. But when Israel broke the ceasefire on 18 March, their plans were shattered. 18 March 2025: The day 183 children in Gaza were massacred by Israel Read More » 'Israeli artillery and aerial shelling began suddenly in the morning. We could only take our tent,' Marouf said. 'We didn't know where to go.' Marouf and his family could hardly find an empty place to set up their tent in Al-Yarmouk neighbourhood due to the crowded movement of displaced people. They are still struggling to find something to eat, as they have no money and were unable to bring any food with them when they evacuated. The north of the Gaza Strip, especially Beit Hanoun, was once considered the food basket of Gaza, but has been decimated by the war. According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), at least 67.6 percent of cropland in northern Gaza has been destroyed by Israel. 'We only eat when charity distributions come or when others share their canned food,' Marouf explained. 'My family and I are sick and suffering from malnutrition.' 'We don't want to rely on humanitarian aid. We want the war to stop now and to live in peace and dignity.'

‘We rely on God, then on UNRWA': Palestinians fear drastic effects as Israeli ban on UN agency comes into force
‘We rely on God, then on UNRWA': Palestinians fear drastic effects as Israeli ban on UN agency comes into force

CNN

time30-01-2025

  • Politics
  • CNN

‘We rely on God, then on UNRWA': Palestinians fear drastic effects as Israeli ban on UN agency comes into force

Iman Helles, a displaced mother sheltering in a facility run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in Gaza, fears that she will now be 'thrown out to the streets' with her three children. Israel's ban on the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) came into effect on Thursday, and Helles relies almost fully on the organization to support her family in the devastated enclave. After their home in Gaza City's eastern Shejaiya district was destroyed during the war, they were forced to move into a former girls' elementary school that now serves as a shelter run by UNWRA in central Gaza's Deir al-Balah. 'We live in an agency school. If the agency is banned… we won't eat or drink,' Helles told CNN. 'If they force us out, where will I go with my small children?' Helles is among millions of Palestinians relying on the UN agency for sustenance, education and livelihoods, not only in Gaza but also across the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem. In October, Israel's parliament, the Knesset, passed two bills – one barring UNRWA from activity within Israel, and another banning Israeli authorities from any contact with UNRWA. The second bill revokes a 1967 treaty that allows the agency to provide services to Palestinian refugees in areas under Israel's control. The legislation came into effect Thursday, and it is expected to severely restrict UNRWA's activities, with a potentially devastating human impact. Israel has been trying to shut down the agency for years, but it escalated measures against it after Hamas-led militants attacked the country on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostage. Israel accused some UNRWA employees of participating in that attack. A UN investigation found that nine employees from UNWRA's 13,000 staff in Gaza 'may have' been involved in the attack and no longer work at the agency. But UNRWA has long maintained that Israel hasn't provided it with evidence against its former employees. The agency says it had regularly provided Israel with a full list of its staff members and has accused Israel of detaining and torturing some of its staffers, coercing them into making false confessions about ties to Hamas. How Israel intends to proceed with the ban remains unclear, but some of its effects are already underway. On Sunday, Israel ordered UNRWA to 'vacate all premises in occupied East Jerusalem and cease its operations in them by 30 January 2025,' the UN agency said. Israel also shortened the validity of all visas for UNRWA's international staff to Wednesday, the UN said. This 'is tantamount to being evicted,' UNRWA spokesperson Jonathan Fowler said. 'UNRWA's international staff at the East Jerusalem office had to evacuate and relocate to Amman, Jordan earlier in the day,' the UN said Wednesday. 'Office equipment and vehicles have been moved out, and efforts are continuing to digitize its archives.' Days before the ban, the UN warned against its detrimental effects, while Israel insisted the agency is replaceable, and that it is committed to the flow of aid into Gaza. UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said on Tuesday that its implementation will be 'disastrous.' 'The government of Israel claims that UNRWA's services can be transferred to other entities,' Lazzarini said, adding that his agency is unique in its mandate 'to provide public-like services,' which 'can only be transferred to a functioning state.' In a Tuesday speech at the UN, Israel's representative, Danny Danon, said that 'this legislation is about what is happening in Israel; it's not about what's happening in Gaza, in Jordan, in Lebanon. But we will not allow UNRWA to work from Israel.' Danon added that UNRWA's role in Gaza is expected to be phased out and replaced by other UN agencies. 'I think it's going to be a gradual process until other agencies will step in and will take their positions,' Danon told reporters. Israeli government spokesperson David Mencer said on Wednesday that some of these agencies will include the World Food Programme (WFP), UN children's agency (UNICEF) and UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS), which already operate in Gaza. All three agencies have worked closely with UNRWA, with WFP and UNICEF condemning the ban on their partner UN agency. More than 912,000 Palestinian refugees are also registered with UNRWA in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, around a quarter of whom live in 19 refugee camps. In the West Bank, UNRWA caters to more than 45,000 students, and runs some 96 schools, 43 healthcare facilities and 19 women's centers. It has also provided loans amounting to $225.3 million. Israel insists Palestinians will not experience an aid vacuum, saying that UNRWA's aid contribution is minimal – a claim refuted by both UNRWA and other UN agencies. Other agencies 'will have no choice but to continue and to increase their efforts,' Danon said. The ban also raises questions about the safety of thousands of UNRWA workers in Gaza, of whom more than 270 have already been killed since the war began, according to the agency. The conflict has also killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the health ministry there. Asked if UNRWA staff are safe, Danon said: 'It's not (up to) us to take care of their safety.' Mencer described UNRWA on Wednesday as 'a failed institution' that is 'permeated with terrorism.' He then accused the agency of perpetuating the conflict, saying it 'glorifies Jew-killing, glorifies jihad.' Hoda Hussein, who was displaced with her family from north of Khan Younis, described the UNRWA ban as 'a second starvation and a new war on the Gaza Strip.' 'We rely on God, then on them (UNRWA),' she said, adding that for 15 months they had nowhere else to go. 'We rely on it fully, for everything.' CNN's Irene Nasser contributed to this report.

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