The King was opening the Guinness Open Gate Brewery, a £73m investment which will be a new London visitor attraction as well as producing a range of beers.
There was a lesson in how to pour a pint, with the King shown how to tilt the glass to 45 degrees, and then to leave it to settle for between 60 to 70 seconds, which he was told allowed 300 million bubbles to rise inside the glass.
It was not clear who had ever counted them, but the King was ready to raise a glass to Christmas and perhaps, he might have been thinking about “good health” in a more personal way.
His pint-pulling trainer, Leo Ravina, said he had poured a “perfect pint”.
“If you say so,” replied the King, who wiped away a foamy Guinness moustache.
The King seemed less convinced by another piece of hi-tech boozing, where he was shown how an image could be printed, using beetroot or carrot juice, on to the beer’s surface.
Although as monarch, he had to avoid sharing his point (or in this case pint) of view.
There was also no mention of the social media fad of “splitting the G”, where drinkers try to reach a certain point on a pint glass.
But the King seemed to enjoy some of the less usual beers on offer, including one with an apricot flavour.
This tasting session was in the 232 Bar, named after the temperature at which the barley is roasted to get the distinctive flavour.