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27th October 12, 12:20 AM
#1
Interesting
Our good friend Moira came over yesterday and brought a Whiskey for us to try.
Its really quite lush.

Iechyd Da 
Derek
A Proud Welsh Cilt Wearer
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27th October 12, 03:47 AM
#2
Interesting and a clever marketing ploy. "Product of Ireland" - they accidentally fail to say that it is in fact Northern Ireland.
Regards
Chas
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27th October 12, 06:19 AM
#3
Girls! Feck! Drink! "Yes Father".
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27th October 12, 06:24 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by Lime
Girls! Feck! Drink! "Yes Father".
Indeed. I'm sure Father Jack would love this stuff
- Justitia et fortitudo invincibilia sunt
- An t'arm breac dearg
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27th October 12, 06:47 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Chas
Interesting and a clever marketing ploy. "Product of Ireland" - they accidentally fail to say that it is in fact Northern Ireland.
Regards
Chas
Agreed, I have seen this, it's from Belfast. You can, however, buy it in Ireland, unlike Magner's Irish Cider, which you can't.
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27th October 12, 07:24 AM
#6
 Originally Posted by Chas
Interesting and a clever marketing ploy. "Product of Ireland" - they accidentally fail to say that it is in fact Northern Ireland.
Regards
Chas
But Northern Ireland is Ireland. Am I missing something? Bushmills Irish whiskey is one of the most well known Irish whiskies and it is made in Northern Ireland.
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27th October 12, 08:22 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by Phil
But Northern Ireland is Ireland. Am I missing something?
Maybe some teeth, depending whereabouts you say it
Just joking, it's all in the ear of the beholder, really. I can think of some places where I wouldn't say it, though.
Feckin is marketed as a "fun" brand for the export market. I don't know how much care the foreign market takes when looking at origins, but usually if something is marketed as being "genuine Irish", in other words, south of the border, it's marked "Made in Eire" or "Made in the Republic of Ireland".
Items marked "Made in Northern Ireland" means, technically speaking from an export point in terms of tax, Made in the UK. The license to make alcohol will be a UK license. Buying an "Irish Whiskey" labelled Made in the UK would not have the same ring to it, and you are paying a tax to the UK government, so hence it can be seen as a bit of a marketing ploy.
To be honest, would it make a difference? From 1932 until 2005 the vast majority of Guiness was brewed in London, England. In Ireland the company was so anti-Catholic that up until 1939 if a Guinness worker wanted to marry a Catholic, his resignation was requested, (This is one of the reasons some Irish regiments drink Carlsberg), yet in my travels I have seen it enjoyed by many of the Irish diaspora as an authentic taste of Ireland. Guinness is certainly far more popular in England than it ever has been in Ireland where sales continue to decline. The biggest market for Guinness has always been the UK, followed by Ireland, then Nigeria with the USA fourth.
I think the Feckin marketing is careful, if a bit opportunistic, but maybe these days, not entirely necessary.
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27th October 12, 09:15 AM
#8
 Originally Posted by Phil
But Northern Ireland is Ireland. Am I missing something?
I suppose it depends on where people want to put the emphasis i.e. geography vs. political borders...
Place of manufacture vs. origin of the brand vs. the style are separate but related issues, as in the case of Guinness that MacSpadger raised. The word "Irish" is commonly applied to a heterogeneous variety of phenomena -- to some people's dismany? A set of Irish stout examples could include a stout of Irish geographic provenance (Northern or Republican), a company of Irish origin producing stout outside Ireland, or even an an Irish-style stout made in Canada by Canadians of dubious heritage
Last edited by CMcG; 27th October 12 at 09:15 AM.
- Justitia et fortitudo invincibilia sunt
- An t'arm breac dearg
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2nd November 12, 02:12 PM
#9
But Northern Ireland is Ireland. Am I missing something?
Indeed.
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