english pale การใช้
- The first beer we made was an English pale ale that came with the kit we bought.
- Outside of the English Pale, however, the colony was inchoate in the minds of the Irish.
- To be fair, I called in my friend Scott, who likes English pale ales, to sample the two.
- Leinster represents the extended " English Pale ", counties controlled directly from Dublin, at the beginning of the 1600s.
- During the Nine Years'War, Sir Eochaidh moves his allegiance to accommodate the moving siege lines between Ulster and the English Pale.
- Depending on the advantage to the sept, the named leader The ?Hanlon supported either the Earl of Tyrone or authorities within the English Pale.
- The night before, I had tried Samuel Smith's Organically Produced Ale, an English pale ale that poured a weak copper hue with a quickly dissipating white head.
- Facing it to the south is Castle Roche, several miles beyond Dungooley, the northern most post of the old English Pale, end of Dublin s colonial reach for many years.
- Settling in Dublin, and the north and south reaches of Dublin County, they expanded into Meath, Westmeath, King's and Queen's County of the central English Pale.
- SCI-BEER-GEOLOGY ( Denver )-- The refreshing bitterness of an English pale ale, the clean light taste of a pilsner, the dark, almost burnt graininess of Irish stout.
- Some chieftains had sworn allegiance to various individual monarchs, but the colony itself was never stronger than the power the Lord Deputy could muster to control the chieftains capable of pressing upon the English Pale.
- Nonetheless, I came across a regionally produced beer, Texas Tornado, and was told that it followed the English pale-ale tradition of which Guinness'Bass Ale brand is a well-known example.
- Once again the importance of Monasterevin as a crossing point on the Barrow asserted itself and the town came under the opposing influences of the O Mores of Laois, the Hiberno Norman Earls of Kildare and the English Pale.
- Baranowski started out using kits such as the porters, oatmeal stouts, brown ales and English pale ales Daume keeps stocked on his shelves but has since progressed to all-grain brewing, in which he weighs out all his own ingredients.
- In 2014, Tractor won three silver medals ( in the light lager, European amber lager, and strong ale categories ) and three bronze medals ( in the bock, English pale ale, and Scottish and Irish ale categories ) at the State Fair Pro-Am Competition.
- Thirteen years before the Norman Conquest, the Saxon Chronicle relates that in 1053 the Welshmen slew a great many of the English wardens at Westbury, and in that year Harold ordered that any Welshman found beyond Offa's Dyke within the English pale should have his right hand cut off.
- Historian Johannes Lucius added to the " Dalmatia Pale " ( somewhat similar to the " English Pale " in Ireland, as boundary of Roman local laws ) of these Dalmatian City-States even Fiume ( actual Rijeka ) and Sebenico ( actual Sibenik ), after the year 1000 when Venice started to take control of the region.
- For example, Marlowe's " Edward II " is paraphrased in Act 3, Scene 1 ( Marlowe's " The wild O'Neill, with swarms of Irish kerns, / Lives uncontrolled within the English pale " ( 2.2 . 163 164 ) becomes " The wild O'Neill, my lords, is up in arms, / With troops of Irish kerns that uncontrolled / Doth plant themselves within the English pale " ).
- For example, Marlowe's " Edward II " is paraphrased in Act 3, Scene 1 ( Marlowe's " The wild O'Neill, with swarms of Irish kerns, / Lives uncontrolled within the English pale " ( 2.2 . 163 164 ) becomes " The wild O'Neill, my lords, is up in arms, / With troops of Irish kerns that uncontrolled / Doth plant themselves within the English pale " ).
- By 1232, there was probably a Jewish community in Ireland, as a grant of 28 July 1232 by expulsion from England took place ( 1290 ), Jews living in the English Pale may have had to leave English jurisdiction, but there is no evidence for this; and it would certainly have not been difficult for Jews to remain in Ireland in defiance of the 1290 Edict, simply by moving beyond the area of English settlement into the Irish Gaelic areas that England did not control.