Royal
Commercial Brewery
in Manchester,
Greater Manchester,
England 🏴
Owned by
Heineken UK
Established in 1875
Contact
Denmark Rd., Manchester, M15 6LD, England
Description
Looming large over Princess Parkway with its towering cylinders and chimneys belching steam, Manchester's Heineken brewery is one of the city's most recognisable landmarks. Beer has been brewed on the site since 1875, when it was known as the Albert Brewery. It was later sold to John Henry Lees, who changed its name to the Moss Side Brewery. In 1907 it was renamed the Royal Brewery in honour of King Edward VII. The brewery changed hands again in 1913 when Lees' company went into liquidation and it was later absorbed by another local brewery, Walker & Homfrays. The UK's first lager, Red Tower, was brewed here in 1927, named after the building's most striking feature. The brewery took its name too in 1933, becoming the Red Tower Lager Brewery. In 1955 the brewery became known as the Royal Moss Side Brewery and was bought by Scottish Brewers a few years later. After several more changes of ownership, Heineken took over the site in 2008. Today the main beers produced and packaged there are Foster's and Kronenbourg 1664.
4.2/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 5
Flavor 4
Texture 4
Overall 4
Fairly bad citrus spin-off from what is already a terrible tasting lager beer.
Tried
on 22 May 2012
at 15:44
2.9/10
—
Appearance 4
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 2
Overall 2.5
barnyard, floral, nuts, caramel, rotten eggs, pale, clear, frothy, medium sweetness, lightly bitter, medium sourness, medium body, thin feel,
Tried
on 24 Mar 2012
at 13:17
2.9/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 1
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 1.5
Can. Light yellow color with almost no head. Aroma quite watery with hints of corn, grass and hay. Taste, watery with hints of malt and hops. Very light bitterness in finish. What to say more? Nothing.
Tried
from Can
on 25 Jan 2012
at 10:48
3.5/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 4
Flavor 1
Texture 6
Overall 2
Characterless mass-produced lager with a poor and weak tasting flavour to it.
Tried
on 04 Nov 2011
at 15:22
3.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 3.5
300ml bottle. Pale straw with a rapidly diminishing white head; a rather odd aroma - furniture polish and lemon sherbert perhaps; watery with a weak malt flavour; and just a trace of hops in the finish. Decidedly odd.
Tried
from Bottle
on 04 Nov 2011
at 15:16
3.5/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 3
300ml bottle. Pours gold with a large head. Aroma is corn and a weird metallic lemon. Metallic twang is there too. Taste is quite like lemon shandy. Short finish. Nothing smart about this.
Tried
from Bottle
on 26 Oct 2011
at 14:56
4.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 4
Flavor 5
Texture 4
Overall 4.5
Can. Frothy white good mostly lasting head. Yellow colour. Light malty and hoppy aroma. Some ok grainy notes. Light bitter flavor. Short light bitter finish. Watery palate. Deasent pale lager and quite a positive surprice.
Tried
from Can
on 24 Oct 2011
at 07:38
4.2/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5
Flavor 4
Texture 2
Overall 4
50cl can. Pours golden with actually quite a decent head. The nose has just a little pale malt, with maybe some citrus. The taste is quite watery and doesn’t deliver any of the citrus note. The palate could be worse - it could be offensive, it’s just watery. Overall, no need to say any more, I don’t think.
Tried
from Can
on 20 Aug 2011
at 08:41
3.8/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 3
Flavor 3
Texture 4
Overall 4
Half a pint of Fosters in The County Hotel JDW Ashford. Clear gold thin white head. Well its cold. It tastes vaguely of cereal. No discernable hop presence. Not horrible like the Stella 4% was just vaguely flavoured water. Pointless.
Tried
on 21 Feb 2011
at 10:24
3/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 3
Flavor 2
Texture 4
Overall 2
440ml can. Pours pale golden with a large head. Aroma is corn, slightly sweet. Barely any taste at all. Sweet aftertaste,
Tried
from Can
on 19 Nov 2010
at 12:27