HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesThe Tippling Point | What the fridge did for Foster's in Australia

The Tippling Point | What the fridge did for Foster's in Australia

Lighter, crisper, colder. Foster's beer in 1889 hit the bullseye with the new strategy that would take a punishing Australian sun head-on.

February 12, 2022 / 13:12 IST
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Piccadilly Circus, London, in 1992. Foster's reached UK shores in 1972, and quickly became popular there. (Photo: Matthias Prinke via Wikimedia Commons 2.5)
Piccadilly Circus, London, in 1992. Foster's reached UK shores in 1972, and quickly became popular there. (Photo: Matthias Prinke via Wikimedia Commons 2.5)

"Australian for beer"

Few among you beer aficionados would not have noticed that tagline adorning the blue wrapper of the bottle. Yeah, you're right. It is Foster's. The most authentic of Aussie experiences in liquid form, you might think. But sorry.

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Down under, if you breeze into a bar in Melbourne and place an order for Foster's, quizzical eyes and raised brows may turn to you. In many states in the country, people don't even know such a beer exists in the world. Carlton Draught and Victoria Bitter are way ahead in the hit chart.

Still, Foster's was born in Australia when two Yankee siblings - William M. and Ralph R. Foster - arrived in Melbourne in 1886 to try their luck in brewing. Foster's brewing company was set up in Collingwood with the help of an American refrigeration engineer and a German brewmaster. The brothers delivered their first lot to hotels in Melbourne.