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Old 07-09-2011, 10:01 AM #3
Omah Omah is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Tralfamadore
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Omah Omah is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Tralfamadore
Posts: 10,343
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pyramid* View Post
Wasn't Stout a drink that used to be given in hospitals decades ago due to it's nutritional value - can remember my grandparents discussing this....?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stout

Quote:
Milk stout

Milk stout (also called sweet stout or cream stout) is a stout containing lactose, a sugar derived from milk. Because lactose is unfermentable by beer yeast, it adds sweetness, body, and calories to the finished beer. Milk stout was claimed to be nutritious, and was given to nursing mothers, along with other stouts, such as Guinness. The classic surviving example of milk stout is Mackeson's, for which the original brewers claimed that "each pint contains the energising carbohydrates of 10 ounces of pure dairy milk". In the period just after the Second World War when rationing was in place, the British government required brewers to remove the word "milk" from labels and adverts, and any imagery associated with milk.

http://www.corrieblog.tv/2007/09/in_celebration.html

Quote:
Corrie A-Z: M is for milk stout

What would Coronation Street be without milk stout? Ena Sharples & Co. may not have been as outspoken had they not enjoyed their daily stimulant.

Note : 1 small bottle = 192 kcal !


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