So I learn something new every day.
I decided to celebrate St. Paddy's day with a bottle of stout. Much of the Guinness sold here is produced in the New World using the recipe from the Emerald Isle, but I wanted some true Irish beer and picked up some Guinness draft bottles which are imported from Ireland.
To my surprise, I find a long white plastic thingy in the bottles.... ???
Well apparently this thing is called a "rocket" and has been placed into the bottle to create agitation to produce the creamy head texture as you drink it from the bottle (which you are supposed to do). I never knew they did this - I guess those advertising dollars were not targeted to my demographic.
The beer tasted just fine but at the end I was a little perturbed by having this chunk of plastic stuck in a bottle I would like to reuse. I felt better after reading it can be extracted with needle nose pliers (or a good forceps - I've seen stranger things removed from stranger places).
I decided to celebrate St. Paddy's day with a bottle of stout. Much of the Guinness sold here is produced in the New World using the recipe from the Emerald Isle, but I wanted some true Irish beer and picked up some Guinness draft bottles which are imported from Ireland.
To my surprise, I find a long white plastic thingy in the bottles.... ???
Well apparently this thing is called a "rocket" and has been placed into the bottle to create agitation to produce the creamy head texture as you drink it from the bottle (which you are supposed to do). I never knew they did this - I guess those advertising dollars were not targeted to my demographic.
The beer tasted just fine but at the end I was a little perturbed by having this chunk of plastic stuck in a bottle I would like to reuse. I felt better after reading it can be extracted with needle nose pliers (or a good forceps - I've seen stranger things removed from stranger places).