Last year's inaugural festival along the Taedong River was a surprise hit with tourists and Pyongyang residents alike.
This year's event, scheduled to begin yesterday, was scrapped for unknown reasons at a time when international criticism over the death of an American tourist and the July 4 test of Pyongyang's first intercontinental ballistic missile have left the country's nascent tourism industry in limbo.
North Korea's premier brewery had crafted a new beer for the festival, and unveiled it yesterday despite the cancellation.
Taedonggang beers are generally reputed to be world- class, which is a matter of national pride among many North Koreans.
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Though not as popular as soju, a much stronger, clear alcohol distilled from rice, beer is readily available all over the country and prices are low.
A pint at the Taedonggang beer hall just across the street from the sprawling brewery campus cost about USD 2. But beer at a stand-up bar on Pyongyang's fancy new Scientists' Street is sold by the liter for about 500 North Korean won, or about 6 cents if calculated at the unofficial but widely used exchange rate of roughly 8,000 won to the dollar.
According to brewery history, the plant on Pyongyang's outskirts was built at the order of Kim Jong Il, current leader Kim Jong Un's father, in 2001 and began production the following year.
The brewery courtyard features a large mural of Kim Jong Il wearing a white lab coat and holding a trademark green Taedonggang bottle while smiling broadly before a production line. Several larger-than-life photos of Kim conducting "on- the-spot guidance" hang in brewery production halls.
The state-run brewery employs about 700 people, but is mostly automated. It takes about 20 days to produce each batch of beer.