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Been slacking on the beer front but hoping to pick that up.
Tonight while watching Boardwalk Empire I enjoyed Westmalle's Trappist Ale Dubbel. I wouldn't go out of my way to drink it, but solid in its own right. |
Sorry, beer thread. I have ignored you. Interested parties can go to http://beeradvocate.com/user/profile/Reaper16 to see most of what I've been up to.
Hosted a party at my fabulous casa last night. The beer refuse in my fridge is crazy. There is no room in my fridge for anything other than the beer that people left in it. Final tally of beers left in my fridge: 2x Samuel Adams Boston Lager, 1x Samuel Adams Black Lager, 2x Samuel Adams Irish Red, 2x Samuel Adams Coastal Wheat, 1x Magic Hat Hex, 19x Miller High Life, 4x Miller Lite, 11x Coors Light, 5x Keystone Light, 1x Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, 1x Sweetwater IPA, 12x Yuengling Lager, 3x Yuengling Black & Tan. |
The Harpoon Octoberfest is darn tasty.
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Goose Island Honker's Ale has been my go-to choice lately. Some pretty good stuff.
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Well, I'm on my 3,456th Guinness, I think I'm on the verge of trying another brand...
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I had some Dogfish Punkin beer. It's expensive as hell, but by God, that was the best pumpkin beer I have ever had.
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Darkness Day was yesterday. Up at 4:30, in line and drinking by 6. Had 6 guys, a canopy, a grill, bunch of snack food, and about 60 beers. Had a good number of good beers - highlights were the 2007 Darkness, and my first taste of Utopias. Discovered that Chef Shack Indian-spiced mini donuts go together phenomenally with 2009 Darkness. Left at about 5pm - epic day, full of good beer, good food, and good company.
Here's a late-morning pic of some of our bigger beers: |
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Dude. You're going to have to perform an exorcism on your fridge or something.... Keystone Light? I can just imagine the look you gave whoever showed up with that shit. |
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Seeyoulator Doppelbock.
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Just opened a Bam Biere from Jolly Pumpkin.
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Took down one of the Keystone Lights in my fridge. Gonna' need someone else to take down the rest. My review: http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile...1/?ba=Reaper16
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I don't think I can handle a Keystone Light.
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Had a Shock Top out at Arrowhead today. Pretty comparable to a Blvd. Wheat, imo.
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Had a Boulevard Amber Ale today. Eh, not bad.
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Beer at Arrowhead: Any decent picks?
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And yes, I misinterpreted his post. I thought he meant sweet as "good". |
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I tend not to pay too much attention though, as I don't feel like paying 7 bucks for a beer. |
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Malted barley -- the principle flavor of beer -- is sweet. Beer is fermented grain sugars. SUGARS, HCF. That's sweetness. Jesus ****ing God, this post couldn't be more wrong if it tried. Plus, fruit flavors are commonplace in beer. Rare is the beer that doesn't have some fruitiness to it. Shit, even Budweiser tastes like green apples in large part. You don't want one-note artificial fruit sweetness, such as the cloying orange flavor in Blue Moon or Shock Top. But naturally-occurring fruit flavors from the malt sugars, or the hop lupulin, or actual fruit such as in lambic beer, is part of why beer is such a great beverage. **** me. |
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We all can ID different flavors in beer just as we can in wine. You drink what makes you happy. Bud tastes like crap to me, always has, always will. Green apples to you, thats fine. I taste old rotted hay and sawdust. I enjoyed some lambic beers in France a few weeks ago. I enjoyed some. Others not so much but enjoyed the experience. Im going to have a Boulevard Pilsner and see what I can pick up. |
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I also agree that Bud is not a pleasant drinking experience. You're using figuartive language when you say it tastes like old rotted hay, though. Right? Because there are beers -- saisons, biere de gardes, guezes, unblended lambics -- that have a heavy hay/barnyard flavor to them. Bud isn't one of them. Bud is pretty much straightforwardly cooked rice, green apple, and a bit of those nasty beechwood chips. |
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Had it while eating at Brasserie in St. Louis and really liked it. |
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http://www.riverfronttimes.com/2010-...art-on-sleeve/ Quote:
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Reaper I am curious where do you find all these beers that you reviewed or what made you want to try them? I have never heard of half of these.
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Anyone had the Boulevard Amber Ale? Me likes.
I know, it's probably something "common" that "everyone" likes. That's great, too. |
I want to know how a grad student can afford to drink so well. It's not fair!
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Drink two $15 beers for a total of $30. That would be drinking some seriously good beers. A $30 bar tab for a night on the town would be pretty light for most college kids. It's pretty easy to go out and drop a hundred in a night if you're really drinking much and bar hopping. |
I didn't mean to come off as rude...To be honest Im jealous. I rarely allow myself to splurge on great beer because I have trouble justifying it. I love good beer but I think I'm too much of a noob to really appreciate it. See if I spent that much, I wouldn't get nearly the return that someone like Reaper gets...
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My "splurge" beer is usually a six of Boulevard. My regular beer is either PBR or Old Style. If Yuengling gets here, which they're saying that it's about to, then that will probably become my goto drinking beer. |
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We enjoyed a number, I would hate to know the number, of different beers in France, Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg, and Austria a few weeks back. In most cases we were in small pubs that had a limited number of brands and varieties but every one had a local or two that we tried. My drinking partner is a huge fan of wheats and we found a number that he really did not enjoy and he found that his normal distain for pilsners was misguided when he had really fresh local pils. The fun was in the differences and in the variety that we generally lack here in the US. And the conversations with the locals was fantastic. One German gent, after some heated and spirited conversation on politics and the economy bought a round and said all differences are put aside over a glass of beer! |
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Now if you want a full-bodied beer that should've been put into the top 50, go to Munich, Germany and get the Hofbraeuhaus Original. |
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In rural area almost every town or group of towns has a local brewery that makes some excellent stuff you cannot get outside of that area. We hit those usually at lunch and they serve some fantastic food as well. This will demonstrate what vast numbers there are...http://www.beer-club.info/beer-brand...er-brands.html Then there is chocolate. And Nuttella. I lost 48 pounds before we went. I just gained 4. |
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That said, I'm not a fan of coriander spiced beers. |
Hey Reaper I want to be a beer snob like you so can I ask you a favor?
Could you give me a list of 5 beers that you recommend that is available in the KC area that I should try? |
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Hoppin' Frog's BORIS Oatmeal-Imerpial Stout Orval Chimay Young's Double Chocolate Stout Rogue's Dead Guy Ale There's plenty more and those were really a quick thinking top 5. BORIS is my current favorite beer. The Chimay may be the most flavorful I've had, though. |
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Thanks for the list btw. |
Someone gave me a six of Bar Harbour's Thunder Hole Ale. I wasn't expecting much for it given the packaging and randomness of gifting but it was a really delicious brown ale. I was impressed. Though, it might have been just me being caught off guard.
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I need to venture across state lines soon. I think I'm going to kick back up my beer trying days. |
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You may also want to clarify which Chimay, assuming you have a specific one in mind. I assume the Red or the Blue... |
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To answer your earlier comment: I can afford to drink so well because I don't drink to get drunk. NewPhin over estimated the number of beers I have a day, too. I don't even average a beer per day. And on the days I do have a beer I usually have just one. |
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You could also just go to one of the good beer stores in the KC area (Lukas, Gomer's) and talk with the staff. |
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Hard to throw rocks at a day on Omaha Beach, two days later visiting Gen. Patton's Grave, a lunch in the Huertgen Forest...a great venison stew and a local brew and a couple hours discussing what the hell the object of Rugby is with an Irishman who played on his town team for 20 years and why soccer is so boring to American Football fans. Dirk...Im working on the pics. Had to take a break for the Chiefs win and seeing the Donks die. http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d1...t/DSCN1142.jpg The Hedgerows the allies had to fight through in the days after D Day http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d1...t/DSC00486.jpg Restaurant in Forest Battlefield http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d1...t/DSC00925.jpg Beer Time..Hofbrau Munich http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d1...t/DSC01104.jpg |
HCF that is really really really...well there are no words
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Boulevard Bully! Porter -- it helped me to appreciate the darker malt flavors and was instrumental in getting me to appreciate roasted malt character. It's also a good beer to show off how hops can be an important part of a beer even when the beer isn't trying to show off the hop flavors. Bell's Two Hearted Ale -- the first India Pale Ale I fell in love with. It happened on first sip. All those floral and grapefruit hop flavors. This is a stellar beer, period, and a great way to appreciate high alpha acid beer. Rogue Dead Guy Ale -- A wonderfully balanced beer. It's brewed in the Helles Bock lager tradition but it uses ale yeast, so its something of a hybrid. This is a great example of a full-flavored beer that shows off what malt types and hop types that play well with each other can do together. Goose Island Matilda -- this is a Belgian Pale Ale. It isn't nearly as hoppy as an American Pale Ale; the yummy Belgian yeast is the major player here. Brewing spices, airy malt, some grassy hops, wonderful fruit flavors of lemon, pear and white grape, and a lively effervescence. This beer is very refreshing yet complex. And it is insane to pair with all kinds of food, from grilled salmon to a simple turkey sandwich. Weihenstephaner Hefeweissbier -- this is the gold standard of German hefeweizen. You're not going to find a better straight-up German wheat beer. Again, refreshing, easy-drinking, yet rich with complexity. Not only will those five beers help your palate along in different ways, they are each deep enough to keep revisiting. They will get even better the more you learn and grow. |
Thanks Reaper I appreciate it and will try all of those.
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Toss in an Erdinger...a great German Wheat... Lucas will have more than you can haul. Lucas at Martin City is excellent and has beer smart folks. |
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I don't know what turdcorn is, but that sounds like an accurate description of Milwaukee's Best. Yeast infections are bad. Beer can certainly get infected though any number of bacteria. You don't want infected beer; it's gross. There are classic beer styles over a thousand years old (lambic, guezue, some Saisons) that are spontaneously fermented b the yeast in the open air. These beers have naturally occurring Brettanomyces yeast which causes funky, barnyard, horseblanket flavors (this yeast is absolutely feared by winemakers. Funk is a definite flaw in wine, but in beer it can be something transcendent) and they can also have some bacteria, such as lactobacillus or pediococcus, that cause lactic or acetic sourness in a beer. When controlled, those bugs can do nifty things in beer. But you don't want your bottles or brewing equipment to get overtaken by those bacteria; that's how infections happen. |
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