tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5445569787371915337.post617733380764459971..comments2024-03-29T05:24:30.793-07:00Comments on Shut up about Barclay Perkins: Milk Stout legally definedRon Pattinsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03095189986589865751noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5445569787371915337.post-60918399564837278572017-06-01T13:07:52.612-07:002017-06-01T13:07:52.612-07:00I could imagine an interesting case over oatmeal s...I could imagine an interesting case over oatmeal stout. I seem to recall you have printed recipes from the past with so few oats they might as well have just waved a picture of an oat by the mash and been done with it.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5445569787371915337.post-38816280202081418832017-06-01T12:05:07.338-07:002017-06-01T12:05:07.338-07:00It’s a pity the breweries taken to task by Newcast...It’s a pity the breweries taken to task by Newcastle Trading Standards in the 1940s didn’t cite this case as a precedent, establishing that Milk Stout was a legitimate name and not misleading. Rob Sterowskihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07870233673933087794noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5445569787371915337.post-17860871254265182602017-06-01T10:00:50.259-07:002017-06-01T10:00:50.259-07:00Would be interesting to track down the "forei...Would be interesting to track down the "foreigners" patent. One possible significance would be that it was essentially a "defensive" patent, protecting the home market of the foreigners from milk stout being made in Britain, without the intention of making it in Britain themselves. If indeed the patent was a British one at all...<br /><br />Another possible significance of the foreigners might be that they were planning to make it in Britain, but then were caught up in either the Franco-Prussian war or the Long Depression of the 1870s/80s and so nothing ever came of it beyond the patent.qqnoreply@blogger.com