Favorite Beer?
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Re: Favorite Beer?
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Last edited by Bean on Thu Apr 16, 2020 7:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- lordhelmut
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Re: Favorite Beer?
There's usually (not always, but usually) a very close correlation between beer that tastes really good and its ABV and IBU's.Bean wrote:There's more to beer than just ABV and IBU and quantity. Counterpoint to "packs a bigger punch" is Shift.Presto wrote:+1 ... anyone worth their weight in beer knows it all comes down to ABV and IBU and Size. Yes, in spite of what you've been told ... size does matter.by lordhelmut » Thu Nov 15, 2012 2:42 pm
Good pack beer. Easier to pack 4 than 6. Packs a bigger punch. A 16oz can usually puts you in the state of mind you are hoping for, whereas a 12oz leaves you hoping for a little more, IMO.
Re: Favorite Beer?
Sorry, Bean, I'm just not a lager type of gal. Typically, when I go to a brewery for the first time, I'll do a sampler ... try everything. Even the Pilsners, lagers, reds, wheats, hefeweizens, etc. I like to get a feel for the place, the brewers, the brews.by Bean » Thu Nov 15, 2012 4:06 pm
There's more to beer than just ABV and IBU and quantity. Counterpoint to "packs a bigger punch" is Shift.
However, my preference is HOPS. The more ... the merrier. So, ABV and IBU are the driving force in beers such as that (i.e., IPAs, Pales, et.al.)
When packing beers (in a backpack), there d*mn well better be a punch. It's my reward for what I've put out. Just sayin ... What's the point of me drinking 15 beers, peeing a whole bunch, and ... what ... no punch?
Just kidding about the 15 beers ... h*ll, I'd be on the floor ... or at least the ground ... and probably losing my beer.
As if none of us have ever come back with a cool, quasi-epic story instead of being victim to tragic rockfall, a fatal stumble, a heart attack, an embolism, a lightning strike, a bear attack, collapsing cornice, some psycho with an axe, a falling tree, carbon monoxide, even falling asleep at the wheel getting to a mountain. If you can't accept the fact that sometimes "s**t happens", then you live with the illusion that your epic genius and profound wilderness intelligence has put you in total and complete control of yourself, your partners, and the mountain. How mystified you'll be when "s**t happens" to you! - FM
Re: Favorite Beer?
Presto wrote: However, my preference is HOPS. The more ... the merrier.
Well said
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Re: Favorite Beer?
If you can find it, I highly recommend trying a gruit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gruit
Unhopped and mildly narcotic. It is, in fact, the ORIGINAL ale, as "ale" used to refer to beer which was unhopped. What a turn it has taken to nowadays when IPA is an ale.
I drank gallons of Weekapaug Gruit at Cambridge Brewing Company (right on the corner of the MIT campus), and it is, by far, the best alcoholic beverage I have ever imbibed. Truly a mindblowing experience.
cambridgebrewing.com/beer/description/weekapaug_gruita
And I know it's technically not a beer, but since Mead is considerably easier to find than Gruit, I'd also recommend giving that a shot.
In both cases, the ancients knew what they were doing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gruit
Unhopped and mildly narcotic. It is, in fact, the ORIGINAL ale, as "ale" used to refer to beer which was unhopped. What a turn it has taken to nowadays when IPA is an ale.
I drank gallons of Weekapaug Gruit at Cambridge Brewing Company (right on the corner of the MIT campus), and it is, by far, the best alcoholic beverage I have ever imbibed. Truly a mindblowing experience.
cambridgebrewing.com/beer/description/weekapaug_gruita
And I know it's technically not a beer, but since Mead is considerably easier to find than Gruit, I'd also recommend giving that a shot.
In both cases, the ancients knew what they were doing.
- Dukietown
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Re: Favorite Beer?
I'm 100% the opposite. I just can't do super hoppy beers and don't at all understand the appeal. However I'm with you on packing in something that packs a punch! Ultralight punch: http://www.oskarblues.com/the-brews/ten-fidy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Presto wrote:However, my preference is HOPS. The more ... the merrier.
It only takes 1!
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Re: Favorite Beer?
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Last edited by Bean on Thu Apr 16, 2020 7:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- highpilgrim
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Re: Favorite Beer?
Practice makes perfect.Dukietown wrote: I just can't do super hoppy beers and don't at all understand the appeal.
Give it a shot. It'll grow on you.
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Hunter S Thompson
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Re: Favorite Beer?
A friend of ours brews beer ... has been for about 15 years. He keeps a log and everything. He even made a mead one time. We've lived through some crappy beers over the years, but those are becoming more isolated. He's got a mighty fine winter brew coming up ... he makes us 2 cases (bombers) ... called Winter Wonder. Love that stuff. He's got a house pale that's pretty good.by Bean » Thu Nov 15, 2012 4:36 pm
I've made some godawful beer. ABV was decent, IBUs probably at least in the 40s...undrinkable. Also had some terribad beer at GABF that was very high ABV and very high IBUs. But I'm pickin' up what you're layin' down - if I'm hauling beer with me in the backcountry it better not be some 3.2 nonsense. And ABV/IBU needs to balance, and my preferences are towards a lack of excessive citrusiness.
pvnisher, ale = top fermenting, lager = bottom fermenting. Nothing to do with IBUs, ABV, plato, or gravity.
I have always appreciated people who get into the science of the beer and take on the challenge of brewing their own. I'm barely trying to get interested in some of that ... it used to just be an interest in ABV because I connected it to what I preferred when drinking a beer. Then, discovered the IBU aspect. Gravity .. I'm starting to look into that.
Last edited by Presto on Thu Nov 15, 2012 3:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
As if none of us have ever come back with a cool, quasi-epic story instead of being victim to tragic rockfall, a fatal stumble, a heart attack, an embolism, a lightning strike, a bear attack, collapsing cornice, some psycho with an axe, a falling tree, carbon monoxide, even falling asleep at the wheel getting to a mountain. If you can't accept the fact that sometimes "s**t happens", then you live with the illusion that your epic genius and profound wilderness intelligence has put you in total and complete control of yourself, your partners, and the mountain. How mystified you'll be when "s**t happens" to you! - FM
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Re: Favorite Beer?
That's what it means *now*.Bean wrote:pvnisher, ale = top fermenting, lager = bottom fermenting. Nothing to do with IBUs, ABV, plato, or gravity.
Ale used to mean unhopped. At least in the 1500s in Britain.
See also "real ale". Unfiltered, unpasteurized, un-carbonated, and mostly served at cellar temperature.
It took me a while to come about to the British ales, but I now vastly prefer them to the carbonated American ones.
I don't know if you'll be able to find a real ale in the US, though.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_ale#Real_ale
Re: Favorite Beer?
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Last edited by Bean on Thu Apr 16, 2020 7:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
"There are no hard 14ers, but some are easier than others." - Scott P
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Re: Favorite Beer?
Very true.highpilgrim wrote:Practice makes perfect.Dukietown wrote: I just can't do super hoppy beers and don't at all understand the appeal.
Give it a shot. It'll grow on you.
I hated hoppy beer for years, thought they were horrible. That is when I used to drink beer with fruit in it. A good buddy would always come over a leave a few pales in the fridge, and they would sit there for months. One night I had a few when I was to lazy to go to the store, that is where I trace my addiction. Back then, Sierra Nevada Pale Ale was insanely hoppy to me. Now, I can't even taste the hops in that beer. IPAs have killed my palate, they are the only style I drink now.
I've seen many people go through this same process since....give it time, might happen to you too.
Last edited by jblyth on Thu Nov 15, 2012 4:18 pm, edited 2 times in total.