My (Your) favorite Beer

Posted by: hybrid8

My (Your) favorite Beer - 14/02/2011 22:15

I suppose this can get into market research as well, but I'll try to keep numbers out of it. smile

My all-around favorite beer-producing nation is Belgium. IMO, they simply have no equals for my tastes. That said, they also have what's perhaps the beer I despise the most of all I've ever tasted. Stella Artois.

I'm primarily an Ale fan, and the more fermentation, the better - including in-bottle yeast deposits. Because of this, so far my main go-to beer, which is easy to obtain locally and well-priced compared to most other domestics and premiums, are the beers of Unibroue, of Chambly Quebec. Without hesitation, I give them absolute top honors as the best brewery in all of North America, regardless of size. I can't say I've ever had anything from them that I haven't at least liked somewhat.

My goto products from Unibroue (primarily the first three):

Trois Pistoles - Abbey-style strong dark ale
Maudite - Strong amber red ale
La Fin Du Monde -Tripel-style golden ale
Noir de Chambly - Belgian-style black ale
Blanche de Chambly - North America's first Belgian-style white.

I like Unibroue's stuff so much in fact, that I think they can more than hold their own against almost anything from Belgium. And believe me, I also love me some Chimay and Westmalle.

Recently I also bought nearly a case (of 750ml bottles!) of a beer I'd only had once before, two years ago and fell in love with. It's apparently from the only Abbey/Trappist brewery outside of Belgium, Koningshoeven in the Netherlands. The beer is their La Trappe Quadrupel. It's the only one I've ever been able to get from them here locally and it's practically a dessert beer. At 10.5% ABV it's not something you're going to knock down bottle after bottle either. wink

On a domestic note, like almost everyone around here, I also quite like Alexander Keith's India Pale Ale, which is nowhere near as bitter as a true IPA. Probably my favorite "mass-produced" beer is Blue Moon - which is a Molson Coors product. It's done in a more micro style and apparently even though claimed to be from Colorado, some of it is actually brewed here in Canada and exported to the US. It's not available for sale in Canada and the closest to its recipe is Rickard's White, which is also a Molson brand.

Ok, now I have to get back into the kitchen to finish off the lobster risotto I started doing prep for an hour ago.

Oh.... I won't touch Labatt's Blue, even when it's free. wink
Posted by: frog51

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 14/02/2011 22:38

Interesting - I only see Belgium as a producer of beers I drink to get drunk, not to enjoy. I far prefer the Bavarian beers, if we are looking at lagers or pilsners (remember Stella is a lager), or British real ales (as defined by CAMRA - http://www.camra.org.uk/)

That said, I tried the local SF brew Anchor Steam yesterday (Robotic gave me good advice) and it was excellent. A bitter, hoppy brew.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 14/02/2011 23:27

Yep, I know Stella is a lager. I don't prefer lagers, but there are a number of them I also quite enjoy. Just not Stella, which to me tastes just acrid.

Perhaps my opinion of Belgium is very heavily slanted because of their particular exports available to me. Really, apart from Stella, most everything else is really premium abbey-style stuff. Ok, there's also Hoegaarden, but it's a white, which I've already mentioned I quite like. Leffe, blonde and Brune, also much enjoyed.

My favorite German beers are all white ales, but I've had a pils here and there that I've enjoyed as well. I wish I'd kept track of them all. I now actually have an app to do just that. smile

I'm not a fan of most British/Irish beers, lagers or ales. I've had a few stouts I've enjoyed, but it's really hit and miss. I don't mind a Guinness at all though.
Posted by: DWallach

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 00:40

I share your bafflement in Stella. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella? It's inexplicable.

I've twice managed to visit Brasserie Cantillon in Brussels, one of the few remaining classical lambic breweries. Sadly, I can't buy their stuff locally, so I instead need to carry it back on the plane, but with stupid U.S. travel restrictions on liquids, it can be difficult. Their beers are far more rich and complex than the more-easily-available Lindeman's lambics. The only minus is that they're decidedly acidic. I can't drink a full pint of the stuff before I start having, umm, negative reactions. (I couldn't drink a full pint of orange juice either, for much the same reason.)

I also agree with the joys of German beers and even pilsners from the Czech Republic (versus the American varieties).

Most beers I drink, however, come from my local increasingly-less-micro-brewery, St. Arnold, which does a lovely kölsh ("Fancy Lawnmower Beer") and my favorite spring bock.
Posted by: mlord

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 00:46

I'm all for true British Ale -- nectar of the gods!
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 02:35

Originally Posted By: DWallach
I share your bafflement in Stella. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella? It's inexplicable.

If I drank beer I would avoid that one for the awful Adrian Brody commercial alone.

So yeah, I guess if I had to pick, my favorite beer is of the "root" variety...and I don't even like that kind all that much...except with some vanilla ice cream smile

Anyway, sorry, continue smile
Posted by: JBjorgen

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 03:38

I'm 33 and I've never tasted beer. I don't really have a problem with it, just never thought it was for me.
Posted by: tonyc

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 03:42

The beer I try to always have on hand these days is Yards Philadelphia Pale Ale. It's a good "gateway beer" for anyone who comes over that drinks yellow fizzy macros, and it pairs well with just about anything, especially another. I'm also rarely without at least a sixer of Yuengling Lager, which is my go-to beer when I'm out at an unfamiliar bar -- almost any place around here will have Lager on draft, and if they don't, I'm probably in the wrong bar.

Other all-time favorites include the aforementioned Unibroue roster (especially Blanche de Chambly and Fin du Monde), just about anything from Troeg's, especially Dead Reckoning Porter, Franziskaner Hefe-Weiss, Weihenstephaner Hefe-Weiss, Allagash White, Dogfish Head 60 and 90 Minute IPA, Victory Storm King, Magic Hat #9, Stone Ruination IPA, Bell's Two-Hearted Ale... those are all definitely in the top tier.
Posted by: Redrum

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 04:06

I’m mostly on the dark side:

«» Sam Adams (the regular blend, not the seasonal crap)
«» Guinness
«» Miller highlife (on my light days, in the bottles only)
«» Steel Reserve 211 (When I want to get hammered)

And usually any darker beer. I like to switch around.

I’m sorry but Blue Moon is a horrible girl beer IMO
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 04:59

Lately, I've been, uh, cash-poor. Which means I've been drinking a lot of PBR. It's still darned good for a dirt-cheap beer. I did have some Redhook ESB in my fridge, and I've been slowly working my way through that. It's a decent middle-of-the-road ESB.

I think my favorite beer I've ever had is Old Speckled Hen. It's yeasty and malty; it's the most like liquid bread of any beer I've ever had. There's a major problem with it, though: it's sold (at least in the US) in clear bottles, and it's hard to come across them before they skunk up. You can also get it in widget cans, but I've never had a widget can beer that I thought was good at all. They all have, to me, a very oily mouthfeel.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 05:04

Originally Posted By: JBjorgen
I'm 33 and I've never tasted beer. I don't really have a problem with it, just never thought it was for me.
I've tasted beer on two or three separate occasions (two or three sips total). I try it every 3-5 years to see if my tastes have changed, and each time I try it I feel like gagging.
Posted by: Cris

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 06:48

I'm not really a fan of beers & ales. I like a really good larger every now and then. I can only find my favourite on holiday in Austria http://www.zipfer.at really refreshing after a hard day skiing !!!

Not a fan of the Belgian Monastery ales, you can feel the hairs on your chest grow as you sip smile

Cheers

Cris
Posted by: Taym

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 10:17

Originally Posted By: JBjorgen
I'm 33 and I've never tasted beer. I don't really have a problem with it, just never thought it was for me.


I don't know anything about beers, I just occasionally (rarely) drink it. Some beer I like, some I don't, but can't even remember names and types.

What's the difference between beer, ale, lager, or else?

I remember in Iceland I used to drink a non-alcoholic malt drink which you could find anywhere, which I loved. But I guess it doesn't count. smile
Posted by: Tim

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 10:31

Originally Posted By: DWallach
I share your bafflement in Stella. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella? It's inexplicable.


Oddly enough, I love Stella. It is one of my favorite beers ever.

Old Speckled Hen was amazing, but the only place I ever had that was in Singapore. The guy I was on travel with (now my boss) couldn't remember the name and kept referring to it as 'Old Spotted Chicken', which confused the hell out of the bartender. Fun times. In Japan, I had Sapporo Dark and Kirin Lager, both which were great and taste completely different from what we get stateside.

Killkenny is really good stuff, also. I also like Longboard. I tried Session Red for the first time on Saturday, and it is pretty decent. We have a local brewery (Papago) that makes a Vanilla-Orange Wheat beer which is really good.

When I head out east, I have to get my fill of Yeungling Lager, which we can't get back here. There is a pub out in the Aberdeen area that makes 'Resurrection', which is awesome.

I like a ton of different beers and styles, it is hard to name them all off the top of my head. Normal, no special occasion beer is Corona.
Posted by: DWallach

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 13:14

I suppose I should attempt to drag this thread vaguely sideways into wine and spirits. I first discovered and got into beers in college, but in the past few years I've been learning more about wine and cocktails.

The trick with wine, I think, is getting to the point that you have a sense of what different varieties taste like. Just like I can say that I prefer certain kinds of Belgian or German beers, I can now say that I like several of the subtle French and Italian wines over many of the California ones that try to hit you over the head with an oak barrel. (Yet, my favorite wine, bar none, is made in California in an Italian style.)

More recently, I've been trying out various cocktails. My realization there is that most bars are garbage, but these new "craft cocktail" / "mixology" bars can do some amazing things with simple ingredients. I'm enamored with how great something as simple as a sazerac can be.
Posted by: Phoenix42

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 14:54

I share your bafflement in Stella Budweiser. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella Budweiser? It's inexplicable.

Not sure what I currently have at home, it is a 12 pack imported from I think Germany of hefeweizen. But I was in a rush and the price of ~$13 made the decision easy.

I like some of the Sam Adam seasonal stuff, but my brother-in-law (the foodie one) commented that all the Sam's stuff is the same with just minor tweaks here and there. Given the little bit of brewing I have done, this is very possible true.

In New England we are pretty spoiled for breweries, some of the local brews I really like are:
Smuttynose Winter Ale - Portsmouth NH
Anything by Alagash who do great Belgian-style beers - Portland ME
I drank a few growlers of Berkshire Ale from the other BBC while doing the siding on my house (single store, I'm not completely stupid!).

One really disappointing bear that comes to mind is the Blue Moon Winter, the regular brew is great, but the winter crap has like a caramel syrup added in. Ugh frown

I've never been into spirits, which is unfortunate as we name hte firmware releases after single malt scotches and have a stocked bar for the occasional sampling session.
Posted by: andy

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 14:57

I share your bafflement in Stella Budweiser <insert just about any British lager>. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella Budweiser <insert just about any British lager>? It's inexplicable.
Posted by: Tim

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 15:34

Originally Posted By: andy
I share your bafflement in Stella Budweiser <insert just about any British lager>. How could a country that produces so many great beers produce Stella Budweiser <insert just about any British lager>? It's inexplicable.


When I was in the UK, the hotel I stayed at had somebody paying like 3 or 4 pounds for a bottle of Budweiser (each) nightly. That lead to a great conversation with the bartender (who was from Australia) about the different styles of beer, who drinks what when it is exported compared to who drinks it locally, etc.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 15:44

I started my drinking with cocktails, then I started wines and finally I started beers. I drink all of them now and of course prefer wine, but I have a serious appreciation for beer. Much more so than for any hard liquors.
Posted by: jmwking

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 15:51

I almost never drink beer anymore. Wine with dinner. Bourbon on ice (just like my sainted grandmother taught me) or Scotch, neat or with a splash, when I want to sip something.

My every day bourbon is Old Forester relatively cheap but tasty. My usual Scotch is Aberlour, regrettably not so cheap.

-jk
Posted by: tman

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 16:14

I don't see the appeal of Budweiser at all. Its tasteless. I was at a bar once where they had some kind of official promotional event and we all got bottles of 1 day old Budweiser to try. I assume that it was just bottled the day before and not that they had actually made it from scratch within the last day.
Posted by: tanstaafl.

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 17:57

Originally Posted By: andy
I share your bafflement in Stella Budweiser <insert just about any British lager>.
My bafflement is why would anyone actually drink any of that vile stuff on purpose?

crazy

tanstaafl.
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 19:24

Originally Posted By: JBjorgen
I'm 33 and I've never tasted beer. I don't really have a problem with it, just never thought it was for me.

Same here (okay... I'm over 33). I've waved it under my nose, but the stuff smells like piss to me, so my desire to have a taste roughly equals (but has a slight edge) on my desire to lick a urinal.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 19:27

You were probably smelling a Stella or Bud. Or Labatt's Blue. I think they're at least 50% piss by volume.

I was of the same opinion until I discovered beers I really liked.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 19:41

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
You were probably smelling a Stella or Bud. Or Labatt's Blue. I think they're at least 50% piss by volume.

I was of the same opinion until I discovered beers I really liked.

Each time I've tried it, it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me and equally TERRIBLE.

I doubt this is a question of brands.
Posted by: tman

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 19:50

To be honest, I'm not that keen on beer, ale or lager. I've just learnt to tolerate it but its generally too gassy for me to drink comfortably and I don't really like the bitter taste.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 21:53

Originally Posted By: Dignan

Each time I've tried it, it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me


The stuff I mentioned in my first post, compared to a pilsner like Bud, is practically like comparing wine to beer. At least sparkling wine to beer. wink

In soda terms, like Seven-Up compared to Coke or Pepsi. Seriously, abbey-style ales are that different.
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 22:00

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
You were probably smelling a Stella or Bud. Or Labatt's Blue. I think they're at least 50% piss by volume.

I was of the same opinion until I discovered beers I really liked.

Heh... nice of you to throw in the Canadian brew. wink

It's pretty much all beer, so far (and living in Portland, I've had quite a few micro-brews pass under my nose). But the same holds true for wine, too. I just don't like the smell of most alcoholic drinks.

It is kind of disappointing, in a way, because I'd like to explore the use of wine and beer in cooking, but I have no idea where to start, and then I'd be left with open bottles of stuff that no-one in the house is going to drink.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 22:45

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
Originally Posted By: Dignan

Each time I've tried it, it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me


The stuff I mentioned in my first post, compared to a pilsner like Bud, is practically like comparing wine to beer. At least sparkling wine to beer. wink

In soda terms, like Seven-Up compared to Coke or Pepsi. Seriously, abbey-style ales are that different.

The difference is that Seven-Up is tolerable to me, whereas I have to go brush my teeth after tasting beer. The taste is pretty much offensive to me, and I haven't been tasting things like Bud or Milwaukee's Best, but some middle of the road stuff like Sam Adams Octoberfest and Blue Moon (which you've mentioned). No matter what, it tastes just plain disgusting.

It's funny, there's more people in this thread who have said that they don't drink beer than I've met in my whole adult life.
Posted by: DWallach

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 22:59

Originally Posted By: jmwking
My every day bourbon is Old Forester relatively cheap but tasty. My usual Scotch is Aberlour, regrettably not so cheap.

For just sipping, I enjoy port or an aged (añejo) tequila. I'm a bit new to the whiskey/scotch game, and I've found that I like rye whiskey more than bourbon. I haven't really dug into the wild world of Scotches enough to have strong opinions, but I definitely enjoy the good, smokey stuff.

And as to the other thread about Stella/Budweiser/etc., there's a wild, diverse world of beers out there. The good ones don't advertise on TV or the jerseys of your favorite sports team.
Posted by: andym

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 15/02/2011 23:07

When I started drinking (in my mid-teens) Cider was the only way to go. But after being sick so many times through consuming too much of it, my brain started associating the smell of Cider with being sick, so I can't really enjoy it any more without gagging. My late teens and early twenties were predominantly lager (Stella, Fosters, Becks, Kronenbourg etc.), price per pint being the chief determining factor. Although after getting my driving licence at 17, I stopped drinking regularly.

Once I hit 30 (or thereabouts) my interest in beer resurfaced, and my taste seems to have switched to bitter/ale/stout. Currently my favorite pint is without a doubt, draught Guinness. To me, Guinness used to taste foul unless you were in the ROI, but since it all comes from Dublin now it's far more palatable to me. If I'm at the pub and it's not available, I'll try whatever they on tap. I had a nice pint of UBU in Stratford-upon-Avon this last weekend.

I also enjoy wheat beers like Hoegaarden and Erdinger. Leffe Blonde and Brune are quite nice as well. At home I usually have a few bottles of Old Speckled Hen, since Guinness in a can is pretty nasty. The one thing I still haven't developed a taste for though is whisky, it's still like swallowing battery acid to me.
Posted by: jimhogan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 00:59

I think this is all about the season and location. No inclusive list but I can think of:

January/February, on a hot beach somewhere, Tiger lager or Huda Bia, or Redstripe, even.

April/May, visiting a friend in Nuremberg: Kulmbach/EKU Pils drafht

June, helping a friend deliver his boat out of the Florida Keys: Busch in a can

October, with a nice juicy pork roast: Spaten Oktoberfest.

Early December, reading a spy novel in a tavern: Sierra Nevada Celebration on tap

Market research.
Posted by: BartDG

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 06:53

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Originally Posted By: hybrid8
You were probably smelling a Stella or Bud. Or Labatt's Blue. I think they're at least 50% piss by volume.

I was of the same opinion until I discovered beers I really liked.

Each time I've tried it, it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me and equally TERRIBLE.

I doubt this is a question of brands.

Originally Posted By: tman
To be honest, I'm not that keen on beer, ale or lager. I've just learnt to tolerate it but its generally too gassy for me to drink comfortably and I don't really like the bitter taste.

You guys are not alone. I've got a very sweet tooth and really hate anything to eat/drink which tastes bitter. So this includes (almost) all beers. And this coming from somebody from Belgium! smile I really prefer wine, but on the other hand I don't drink that much at all. Eg. I've never, EVER opened up a bottle of wine only for me to drink or in the company of only my wife. (with the exception if wine was needed to prepare some food dish) Even if I drink, I'm a real social drinker, so I only drink when I've got company, and even that is not guaranteed. Very often, I'm the only one of the bunch with a soda in front of me. Which usually makes me the designated driver too, but I don't mind that.

Same as you Matt, I've tried this every so many years again to see if my taste pattern had changed as I grew older. Seems it didn't (or hasn't so far). I'm 35 now and don't think this will ever change in the future. But I don't really think I'm missing out. In fact, it makes my life simpler: less options (HUNDREDS of beers!), less risk (when driving: was that last beer the one that put me over the legal limit?), less cost (although we can't really complain about the price here -unless you start drinking those trappist beers-, beer is more expensive than soda smile )

Last time I was in Britain, I've tried cider. Now that I liked! But that was probably my sweet tooth talking (or tasting) again.
Posted by: tanstaafl.

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 13:51

Originally Posted By: Archeon
I've got a very sweet tooth and really hate anything to eat/drink which tastes bitter.
I remember an experiment in my high school biology class in which it was demonstrated that about 25% of the population lack the gene for tasting bitter substances.

I wonder if this correlates in any way to people's like or dislike of beer?

tanstaafl.
Posted by: boxer

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 14:12

Until you've tasted beer from Shepherd Neames, you've not tasted beer: It's my one regret about living in the North of England where beer is served with all the appearance of an ice cream cornet!
I keep bottled Amsterdam brewed Heinekin in the fridge, the stuff served over the bar is little better than Stella(or wife beaters as it's generally referred to hereabouts).
I'd drink Pilsner Urquell, but it plays havoc with the blood sugar level.
I also keep Cobra in the fridge specifically for eating with curries: I don't know why it suits, but it does.
I used to drink Peroni in the summer, a fine Italian lager(In bottles, unpalateable draught), but the last couple of years, I've transferred my affection to Whitstable Bay summer brew.
I agree with Andy on Guinness: Has to be Irish - in my youth, only three pubs in London served other than Park Royal. I've recently rediscovered bottled Guinness: A very different taste, given out in British hospitals as a tonic at one time - its been my drink this winter.
Speaking of Guinness products, I always thought Harp was a cut above other lagers, but it's long gone here - I last had it in Florida.
All opinions expressed above are solely those of the writer, who dislikes being contradicted almost as much as he dislikes being more than a yard from a bar(disorientation and dizzy fits set in)
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 14:15

Originally Posted By: Archeon
I've got a very sweet tooth and really hate anything to eat/drink which tastes bitter.


Damn, some trappist beers are like drinking liquid candy, so anyone with a sweet tooth should absolutely love them. I know it's why I do. smile

I'm sure you'd absolutely love Icewine too. It's sweeter than most candy.
Posted by: peter

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 17:41

Originally Posted By: Dignan
it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me

There's also the reverse problem, which is when the same kind of beer tastes very different depending on how old it is, how well it's been stored, that sort of thing. (At least, I assume that's what the difference is.)

This happens to such an extent that it makes me wonder how useful it is to even recommend beers, particularly draught beers, to people: some of the best pints I've had have been Ruddles County, but most Ruddles County is just average. There's a pub near me that does a jolly good St Austell's Tribute -- but also other pubs in Cambridge where the Tribute isn't very nice.

So my beer recommendations are a travelogue, not a travel guide. You can go and seek out Jennings Sneck Lifter, Theakston's Old Peculier, St Peters IPA, or Robinson's Unicorn (formerly Best), but I can't guarantee you that you'll have the same good experiences there that I did. You're just as likely to do well if you walk into a decent real ale pub (Kingston Arms, Cambridge; Ginger Man, Austin) and order at random.

Peter
Posted by: andym

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 18:11

Originally Posted By: peter
Theakston's Old Peculier

Yes, that's quite nice too.
Posted by: jmwking

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 18:26

Originally Posted By: peter
Originally Posted By: Dignan
it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me

There's also the reverse problem, which is when the same kind of beer tastes very different depending on how old it is, how well it's been stored, that sort of thing. (At least, I assume that's what the difference is.)

This happens to such an extent that it makes me wonder how useful it is to even recommend beers, particularly draught beers, to people: some of the best pints I've had have been Ruddles County, but most Ruddles County is just average. There's a pub near me that does a jolly good St Austell's Tribute -- but also other pubs in Cambridge where the Tribute isn't very nice.

So my beer recommendations are a travelogue, not a travel guide. You can go and seek out Jennings Sneck Lifter, Theakston's Old Peculier, St Peters IPA, or Robinson's Unicorn (formerly Best), but I can't guarantee you that you'll have the same good experiences there that I did. You're just as likely to do well if you walk into a decent real ale pub (Kingston Arms, Cambridge; Ginger Man, Austin) and order at random.

Peter


Perhaps you've come across nefarious barkeeps, who change out the kegs without changing out the tap handles (or perhaps, even, the prices).

-jk
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 22:15

Originally Posted By: peter
Originally Posted By: Dignan
it's been a different kind of beer, and each time it's tasted exactly the same to me

There's also the reverse problem, which is when the same kind of beer tastes very different depending on how old it is, how well it's been stored, that sort of thing. (At least, I assume that's what the difference is.)

That's definitely not the problem with me. It simply comes down to the fact that I hate the taste of almost all types of alcohol. I like some wines, and that's it.

I even dislike foods prepared with beer or wine. Every time I say this the very next thing I hear is someone saying "but the alcohol burns off!" It's incredible how often I hear that, and it's completely untrue.

The one instance I haven't minded alcohol in food is bananas foster, and even then only if it's prepared with Myers Dark Rum.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 16/02/2011 22:56

Originally Posted By: Dignan
I hear is someone saying "but the alcohol burns off!" It's incredible how often I hear that, and it's completely untrue.


Then you're eating some dishes that haven't been prepared properly. Besides, alcohol doesn't have any "taste." wink

Quote:
The one instance I haven't minded alcohol in food is bananas foster, and even then only if it's prepared with Myers Dark Rum.


Did they flambé the alcohol? It shouldn't taste like someone poured rum on your dessert.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 00:23

Sorry, Bruno, alcohol just doesn't burn off. Perhaps if you're the type that enjoys beer and such, it doesn't have a taste for you, but for me I can taste it every time. I'm not talking about low-end restaurants either, here.

I'm telling you, I've had the same reaction from everyone else I've told this to. Then one of those people came across an article about common cooking myths, which included the "it cooks off" myth. I'll see if I can find it.

Here's where I first saw it (halfway down the page). It took me a bit of searching, but you can find the information used for their chart at the USDA's site. It shows that even when flamed, only 25% of the alcohol evaporates.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 03:50

Yeah, people don't believe me when I tell them I can taste coffee in things, either. "It just makes the chocolate more chocolatey" or some such nonsense. No, it makes everything, including other foods I'll eat later, taste like coffee.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 12:33

It's amazing then that my personal experience contradicts some of the personal experience of the author of that site Matt. The pre-soaking beans (you simply can't use the long cooking times required to soften them for many recipes), banana in the fridge (they're not inedible, but they turn to shit, inside and out), simmer on a gas stove, cleaning a gas stove (because this has nothing to do with gas/electric but the design of the specific product).

A couple of the things on the site I'd never heard of as myths before and just sounded completely ridiculous that anyone wold even consider. Then there was the eggs thing. I think adding even milk to eggs for an omelet isn't a good idea. wink

Lastly, back on topic, the examples they give of alcohol in food, other than flaming are crap. I suppose you can toss some alcohol into a pot filled with another liquid, but why would you? At least not with anything other then wine. I didn't expect the alcohol to be "burned off" if you poured into a pot of stew or chili. It will however dilute. And since alcohol is typically measured by volume, the percentage weighed against the total volume of food/other liquid would be minuscule, especially when you're starting with something that's already a maximum of 14% ABV (most red wine).

The best use of wine is for deglazing, not dumping it into a large amount of other liquid. You're going to reduce the overall volume of liquid dramatically and perhaps finish it off with something else. I just deglazed a pan of onions, garlic, lobster tails and shrimp two nights ago (after removing the meat) and you would be able to taste the enhanced flavor added by the white wine, but you'd be mistaken if you thought it was alcohol. First because alcohol doesn't have flavor, and second because if there was any in there you'd probably need a decent lab to measure any at all. The contents of the pan were added to a much larger pot of risotto which had already been through close to a litre of chicken stock.

None of the examples on the site use anywhere close to the heat typically used when adding wine/alcohol to a pan. In other words, the examples are bunk, sorry.

Bitt, Coffee imparts a very distinct flavor to pretty much anything it's added to - there wouldn't really be a point in adding it if it didn't. What specific foodstuffs are you talking about though? It does give a roasty and more nutty flavor to chocolate, but it doesn't make it more cocoa-y.
Posted by: DWallach

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 12:40

It's certainly true that when you cook with alcohol, some of it makes its way into the final product, even when you flambé or whatnot. Still, several classic dishes just won't be the same without the alcohol in them. Bread pudding without bourbon, poached pears without port, steamed mussels without a white wine and butter reduction, beer-battered fried fish without the beer... Sure, you can do any of these dishes without the booze, but they're just better with than without.

Also, it's worth noting that alcohol is a hell of a solvent, and many different flavorings that you add by the drop come with an alcohol base. Most notably, most vanilla extracts are alcohol-based. Also, bitters like Angostura, which are normally used by the drop in cocktails, are also used to flavor foods and soups.

On the flip side, I agree with Bitt that I dislike many things made with coffee, like tiramisu, where I find the coffee flavor overpowers everything else.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 12:45

Originally Posted By: DWallach
poached pears without port


I don't know of anyone who would want the alcohol to be missing in this dish! wink That would be a crime.

Quote:
beer-battered fried fish without the beer...
And it's the hops, malt and yeast that you'll taste, not the alcohol which will be long gone after the deep fry.

Quote:
On the flip side, I agree with Bitt that I dislike many things made with coffee, like tiramisu, where I find the coffee flavor overpowers everything else.


You might not like it with any hint of coffee, but overpowering sounds like a bad tiramisu. The perfect example has to be very well balanced, and unfortunately, more often than not, you'll get a sub-standard example when ordering out. At least that's my experience. I've had some pretty bad ones, but also quite a few really great ones. Tiramisu also takes alcohol - and it most definitely stays in. wink
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 12:54

Bruno, you can have your opinion. No matter what you say, the fact is I can still taste the alcohol in the dish.

And you're right, Dan, there are definitely foods that need to be made with alcohol. I'm not arguing that. I'm saying I usually don't like those foods because I can still taste that flavor and it's unappealing. There are certainly exceptions and some things I like. My wife and I make a great risotto with red wine (it ends up purple smile ).

Regardless of whether the actual alcohol burns off, the question is whether that means the taste of it goes with it. It doesn't. If it did, why bother cooking with it in the first place?

Originally Posted By: wfaulk
Yeah, people don't believe me when I tell them I can taste coffee in things, either. "It just makes the chocolate more chocolatey" or some such nonsense. No, it makes everything, including other foods I'll eat later, taste like coffee.

I definitely agree with that. I hate coffee flavored chocolate. I hate coffee in general.

What I think I hate most about it is that coffee almost always smells fantastic to me in every step all the way up to the actual drinking of it. I love smelling the beans, I love the roasting, the grinding, and the entire preparation. But then when I actually take a sip it tastes terrible!
Posted by: andy

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:01

I'd agree that much of that site is opposite to my experience.

The simmering one is particularly odd. All the electric stoves I've ever used work the same way, they have stepped power output (more often consisting of just on an off) and so regulate their temperature by switching on or off (or stepping up and down). The result is they aren't great for simmering, as they typically drop on and off the simmer all the time.

Gas in contrast lets you set the heat output you want and that is what you get.
Posted by: andy

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:05

Originally Posted By: Dignan

Regardless of whether the actual alcohol burns off, the question is whether that means the taste of it goes with it. It doesn't. If it did, why bother cooking with it in the first place?


If you reduce beer the resulting taste it beery, if you reduce wine the resulting taste is winey etc

Beer and wine don't really taste alike, so if the resulting taste is the alcohol, why doesn't the result always taste the same ?
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:06

Sorry, I should have said that I didn't agree with much of that site. I just used the alcohol thing as a jumping off point, mostly to find the actual USDA information. In searching for it, I came across a good number of other sites that say the alcohol doesn't burn off either. I'd be happy to check out a site that disagrees so I can get the dissenting opinion smile
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:06

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Bruno, you can have your opinion. No matter what you say, the fact is I can still taste the alcohol in the dish.


You can taste the beverage, and I'm not disputing that. That's the whole point, to impart the flavor profile of the wine or other beverage into the dish, usually done in a subtle way however.

And in a case of a botched process, I will agree that you might even feel the alcohol - but that is not the correct way to use it in a recipe. You should not get a nose of alcohol nor the mouth-feel. Only the flavor profile of the drink, be it nuttiness, fruit, etc. Obviously excluding recipes where there *IS* a goal to have the alcohol content.

Quote:
Regardless of whether the actual alcohol burns off, the question is whether that means the taste of it goes with it. It doesn't. If it did, why bother cooking with it in the first place?


Exactly. We've pretty much been in total agreement the whole time. Maybe just not in agreement over terms.

IMO, there are three reasons not to have any particular ingredient. Personal choice/preference, morality, medical.

And for all three of those, if we're talking about adding any kind of alcohol to food, it doesn't matter whether some or all of the actual alcohol is cooked off. So I agree, just go without.

It's like if someone is allergic to shellfish and someone else tells them to pick the shrimp out of their dish. There will always be trace amounts of anything left behind.

Quote:
I definitely agree with that. I hate coffee flavored chocolate. I hate coffee in general.


You would totally hate a coffee porter then.

Quote:
But then when I actually take a sip it tastes terrible!


I like coffee, and even I've had that experience before. Since you like the smell of the roast so much, I think there's probably some use of coffee somewhere that you'd enjoy, specially since such a large part of the perception of taste is olfactory.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:10

Originally Posted By: andy
Originally Posted By: Dignan

Regardless of whether the actual alcohol burns off, the question is whether that means the taste of it goes with it. It doesn't. If it did, why bother cooking with it in the first place?


If you reduce beer the resulting taste it beery, if you reduce wine the resulting taste is winey etc

Beer and wine don't really taste alike, so if the resulting taste is the alcohol, why doesn't the result always taste the same ?

Sorry, I wasn't speaking of alcohol in the chemical sense, just the beverage sense. Perhaps that's my problem here. The study is looking at how much of the chemical is burned off. I still argue that the chemical remains, but you're correct, it's the flavor of the beverage that mostly stays behind.

But I'd also argue that when I tell people I don't want to order something because it's cooked in beer or wine, I'm coming from the idea that I don't want the flavor. That's what most people are trying to say when they say "it burns off." The logic remains: if the flavor went away, why would you cook with it in the first place?
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:14

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
Quote:
But then when I actually take a sip it tastes terrible!

I like coffee, and even I've had that experience before. Since you like the smell of the roast so much, I think there's probably some use of coffee somewhere that you'd enjoy, specially since such a large part of the perception of taste is olfactory.

Why are you even arguing with me over my own tastes? I keep saying that I dislike beer, and you keep saying I haven't tried the right ones. Now it's the same with coffee?

Just trust me, I don't like beer, I don't like coffee, I don't like black licorice or brussels sprouts or cucumbers. There's an incredible amount of things I do enjoy, but I know, from a great deal of experience and trying many types of foods and beverages, what I don't like.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:17

Umm, no one's arguing with you Matt. You said you liked the smell of coffee. I only suggested that there's probably something out there that has that smell without the taste you don't like. Don't know how that's an argument.

I also didn't suggest you would like any beer. Just that because something is considered "beer" doesn't mean it's at all similar in taste to something else that's also "beer." That doesn't mean you'd like one though and I didn't mean to ever suggest that.

The difference is like comparing one type of meat to another - they're all proteins and fat, but chicken is not beef is not pork is not lamb.

Besides, the less beer you have, the more for me. wink

What I did find strange was that of the whole message you quoted back and focused on that one specific sentence and took it out of context. Maybe we should start another thread for arguments and then everyone can be clear about what's supposed to happen in it. Because this isn't the right room for that, though I won't argue about it. wink
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:21

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
Umm, no one's arguing with you Matt. You said you liked the smell of coffee. I only suggested that there's probably something out there that has that smell without the taste you don't like. Don't know how that's an argument.

Just when combined with your insistence that I also haven't tasted the right beers.

I'm just trying to say that I try lots of things in order to know my tastes. I can see you're trying to help, so I'm sorry for snapping.

I've tried most of the coffees my wife orders that seem like they'll be good quality, just to see if it's something I'd like. On our trip to San Francisco, one of the main things she wanted to do was get some Blue Bottle coffee. Once again, it tasted awful smile
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:27

To bring it back on subject (because I'm feeling guilty about pulling another thread off its rails):

My wife is a big fan of Sam Adams. The Octoberfest in particular. Any suggestions for other stuff she might like?
Posted by: andy

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:27

I've always been puzzled by the different range of flavours that different people either like or can tolerate.

I can honestly say that I don't know a single* flavour in a (well cooked) food stuff or beverage that I actively dislike. That isn't to say that I enjoy a badly executed bit of cooking.

When I was young I wasn't keen on bitter flavours, but I understand this is due to the way the taste system develops with age.

I had to retrain my taste system to drink coffee though. I had always loved the smell of roasting coffee, but couldn't stand the taste. When I got to my teenage years it became clear that not drinking either tea or coffee was a major barrier to getting along in polite society wink

So I started drinking coffee with 4 spoons of sugar in it. I reduced the sugar down to nothing over a couple of weeks and at the end of it I liked coffee, without sugar.

I have friends and family member who have a seemingly unending list of foods that they don't like. More puzzling are the ones that also have a whole list of foods that they are convinced they won't like, despite the fact that they haven't (and often won't) tried them.

I've always wondered whether my taste system is somehow less sensitive than normal.


* until last year I didn't like tea. After spending a lot of time last year perfecting tea smoked duck breasts I decided to give tea another go. I now have at least one cup of Lapsang souchong most days.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:30

If you don't like Coffee, you're not going to necessarily find one particular one you do like. Whatever exactly you dislike is going to be front and center completely nuking whatever subtleties make them different.

My wife also dislikes coffee. But she'll eat tiramisu. She doesn't even especially like the smell of coffee, so you've already got one up on her there.

Anyway, I'm just not trying to suggest that you haven't tasted the right anything, so I don't want you to think that. I wouldn't tell someone who doesn't eat meat that they just haven't tasted the right one. They all taste different, but it's still possible to dislike them all for whatever reason, including whatever they do have in common.

I'd rather lick a dog's asshole than eat black licorice, that's how bad I hate the stuff. Of course if it tastes like black licorice I suppose I'm doubly screwed.

I do get some of the type of recommendations you've mentioned though. I hate, even more so that black licorice, raw tomatoes. So every now and then someone's like, "but you have to try these cherry tomatoes, they're so much better." No thanks, been there, done that. Tomato (raw) gives me an almost instant gag reflex. I love tomato sauce though.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:47

Originally Posted By: hybrid8
I do get some of the type of recommendations you've mentioned though. I hate, even more so that black licorice, raw tomatoes. So every now and then someone's like, "but you have to try these cherry tomatoes, they're so much better." No thanks, been there, done that. Tomato (raw) gives me an almost instant gag reflex. I love tomato sauce though.

Interesting! I do know others who have felt the same way about tomatoes. I can't remember if it was the exact same thing, though. I think I knew one person who hated tomatoes but liked ketchup. Then again, that stuff has so little tomato in it I'm not surprised smile

Myself, unless it's just a bad or bland tomato, I love 'em.
Posted by: tonyc

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:49

I love Sam Adams. It's now the largest American-owned brewery, and though they don't get a lot of love from beer snobs, they make some fantastic brews that are available everywhere. Their current seasonal offering (Noble Pils) is one of my favorite Spring seasonals of all time. Other than the ghastly Cherry Wheat, I can't think of a bad Sam Adams beer.

Octoberfest is another word for Märzen, a special style of lager. Other good and widely-available Märzens include Ayinger, Hacker-Pschorr, and Spaten. It's hard to know what you'll be able to find locally, but anything in the top ranks of the Bock/Dunkel/Helles Lager styles here would be a good place to start. If you can get it down there, Penn Dark is a Dunkel lager made right here in Pittsburgh, and it's fantastic.
Posted by: tman

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:50

Originally Posted By: Dignan
I think I knew one person who hated tomatoes but liked ketchup. Then again, that stuff has so little tomato in it I'm not surprised smile

Eh? Tomato ketchup is mostly tomato. The amount of raw tomato put in is more than the actual finished product because they concentrate it.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:57

Originally Posted By: tman
Originally Posted By: Dignan
I think I knew one person who hated tomatoes but liked ketchup. Then again, that stuff has so little tomato in it I'm not surprised smile

Eh? Tomato ketchup is mostly tomato. The amount of raw tomato put in is more than the actual finished product because they concentrate it.

Ah, don't know why I thought otherwise. Maybe because it's so sugary.

Originally Posted By: tonyc
Octoberfest is another word for Märzen, a special style of lager.

Ah, that's right. She has said she likes those. Thanks for the recommendations.
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 13:57

I just had a nice Eisbock last night. An icebeer, who woulda-thunk-it.

Aventinus Weizen Eisbock from G.Schneider & Sohn. 12% ABV, 500ml. A nice kick in the pants, it was actually the highest ABV I've tried that I've actually enjoyed.
Posted by: tman

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 14:01

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Ah, don't know why I thought otherwise. Maybe because it's so sugary.

There is a load of sugar and vinegar as well but it should still be majority tomato assuming the brand you're buying or the recipe you're following is a good one.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 14:29

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Regardless of whether the actual alcohol burns off, the question is whether that means the taste of it goes with it. It doesn't. If it did, why bother cooking with it in the first place?

Because many flavoring compounds are alcohol soluble, but not water or oil soluble.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 17/02/2011 16:26

Originally Posted By: andy
All the electric stoves I've ever used work the same way, they have stepped power output (more often consisting of just on an off) and so regulate their temperature by switching on or off (or stepping up and down).

That's not how they are in the US.

That said, in my opinion, electric stoves, at least the traditional style with the coiled eyes, are lousy because it's so hard to get a pan to sit level on them. Given that contact is necessary for useful heat transfer, and it makes a lousy surface to cook on.
Posted by: frog51

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 18/02/2011 10:23

Extraordinary thread :-)

I am pretty much in the camp of "I like almost every alcoholic drink" in the way that I like most soft drinks. Some are very good however, and some are crap - but they all taste different, so in terms of tasting the alcohol - nope, definitely not. You can feel the alcohol, if it is strong, but no taste that is an alcohol one.

In food with alcohol, a steak and ale pie has hardly any alcohol in it, but tastes of ale (a good thing) whereas a vodka jelly tastes of jelly (also a good thing)
Posted by: andy

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 18/02/2011 11:05

Although of course there is a fairly good chance that you wouldn't be able to identify it as steak and ale pie if you were blind folded, were stopped from being able to smell it and not told what it was...
Posted by: frog51

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 22/02/2011 10:09

Originally Posted By: andy
Although of course there is a fairly good chance that you wouldn't be able to identify it as steak and ale pie if you were blind folded, were stopped from being able to smell it and not told what it was...
You're probably right :-)
Posted by: JBjorgen

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 00:20

I'm a fan of root beer, but I enjoy a good ginger beer and birch beer now and again.

IBC was my usual brand until I moved where they don't know what root beer is. Sigh.
Posted by: larry818

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 11:56

For root beer, accept nothing but Henry Wienhard's. It's still not real root beer as I knew it as a kid, but it's the best going now.

IBC tastes like the chemical soup that it is. Like all sodas. smile

As I move around the globe, I never really miss what I can't get any more, as there's always new and yummy things to explore.
Posted by: Robotic

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 15:14

I'm partial to Stewart's Root Beer or Ginger Ale, although the reason may be that I share the name.

wikiwiki
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 15:20

Originally Posted By: larry818
For root beer, accept nothing but Henry Wienhard's. It's still not real root beer as I knew it as a kid, but it's the best going now.


Ah, a good Portland label. Crater Lake Soda, Jone's Soda, and Lucky Lab (a Portland brew-pub) also have good root beers.
Posted by: larry818

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 19:32

Didn't HW leave Portland a while ago?

I want to find a true root beer, even HW is just mixed chemicals. Good mixed chemicals, tho!
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 23/02/2011 21:36

Originally Posted By: larry818
Didn't HW leave Portland a while ago?

It was bought by Miller in 1999, and moved out of state, for a while. It came back to Oregon in 2003, though moved up the Columbia to Hood River.

Quote:
I want to find a true root beer, even HW is just mixed chemicals. Good mixed chemicals, tho!

Let me know if you find one. smile
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 01:35

If anyone is ever in Toronto, I can after sampling tonight, wholeheartedly recommend Beer Bistro. Amazing selection of beer on tap and in bottles, plus a very nice (and tasty) food menu.

I had a Koningshoeven Dubbel and La Maudite on tap tonight. While I've had my fair share of Maudite in the past, this was the first time I'd tried it draught. Different, but very very nice. Quite smooth and maybe a little less malty than in-bottle. Definitely less yeasty, which is neither good nor bad, just different.
Posted by: larry818

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 02:45

If anyone is in Ontario, I'd appreciate the smuggling of some Formosa beer into the usa.

I've heard it's not wonderful beer, but my company's name is Formosa.
Posted by: gbeer

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 03:13

Originally Posted By: JBjorgen
I'm a fan of root beer, but I enjoy a good ginger beer and birch beer now and again.

IBC was my usual brand until I moved where they don't know what root beer is. Sigh.


Is there a chance that locally it's called sarsaparilla?
Posted by: frog51

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 10:59

Originally Posted By: JBjorgen
I'm a fan of root beer, but I enjoy a good ginger beer and birch beer now and again.

IBC was my usual brand until I moved where they don't know what root beer is. Sigh.


Don't think I've ever seen root beer, will have a hunt around as I see it mentioned a lot.
Posted by: mlord

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 13:23

Root beer is a fizzy "soft" drink, commonly found in grocery stores and the like. I've found it in England on previous trips, so have a look around.

Cheers
Posted by: Robotic

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 24/02/2011 14:06

Originally Posted By: mlord
Root beer is a fizzy "soft" drink, commonly found in grocery stores and the like. I've found it in England on previous trips, so have a look around.

Cheers

Shh!

/snigger
Posted by: drakino

Re: My (Your) favorite Beer - 25/02/2011 03:16

Originally Posted By: Archeon
You guys are not alone. I've got a very sweet tooth and really hate anything to eat/drink which tastes bitter. So this includes (almost) all beers. And this coming from somebody from Belgium! smile I really prefer wine, but on the other hand I don't drink that much at all.

Last time I was in Britain, I've tried cider. Now that I liked! But that was probably my sweet tooth talking (or tasting) again.

I'm very much the same way. I have yet to find any beer that I like. I enjoy wine and ciders, but don't drink often. I did come to appreciate a good Woodchuck Amber Cider while watching a movie from years of going to the Alamo Drafthouse. Most of the Austin locations had it on tap.

And I have a few new root beers to hunt down now. Time to go wander BevMo sometime this weekend.