Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The burnished brass of the beer engines shone like old gold and the bar top glowed with a deep patina.
The classic bank of Victorian beer engines showing the suction pumps operated by handpulls.
Neville held a shining glass beneath the spout of the beer engine and drew off a pint of the very best.
Neville pushed a polished glass beneath the spout of the beer engine and drew upon the enamel pump handle.
Beer engines and brewing (Pat.
A beer engine, also known as a handpump, is used to siphon the beer from the cellar.
Meagher looked around at the dark interior, the coal-oil lamps and the beer engines, scattered sawdust on the floor.
Before the beer engine, beer was generally poured into jugs in the cellar or tap room and carried into the serving area.
Beer Engine Red - a red ale (discontinued)
The Beer Engine opposite the station was one of the pubs that pioneered the link between railways and country inns.
The brewpub recently installed a beer engine, which allows the beer to be pulled from the cask, rather than pushed by carbon dioxide gas.
In BEER Engine games, all characters have statistics that represent their physical and mental aptitudes.
A sparkler (also called a sparklet) is a device that can be optionally attached to the nozzle of a beer engine.
The most familiar method of serving real ale is the beer engine, a simple suction pump operated by a tall handpump on the bar.
KAMB is played using the dice rolling mechanism called the Beer Engine.
The BEER Engine!
Until Joseph Bramah patented the beer engine in 1785, beer was served directly from the barrel and carried to the customer.
Most pubs use hand pumps ("beer engines") to draw the beer, whereas stillages are commonly employed at beer festivals.
The beer engine, a device for manually pumping beer from a container in a pub's basement or cellar, was invented by Joseph Bramah in 1797.
Other RPGs using the BEER Engine!
The "Beer Engine" at Newton St Cyres railway station had pioneered the use of rail travel to bring drinkers to its bar.
Newton St Cyres is home to two public houses: the Crown and Sceptre and the Beer Engine.
Professor Slocombe's dawn perambulation of the borough boundaries, for example, or Neville the part-time barman's daily check of the Swan's beer engines.
Pooley squinted disgustedly towards Croughton the pot-bellied potman, who was now up to his elbows in froth behind the beer engines.
Inside, though, it was pure Heart of England, from the glass riding boots in the inglenook fireplace, to the busts of William Shakespeare on the beer engines.