Beer For the resident alcoholics
#21
Posted 02 October 2008 - 03:10 AM
Rochefort 10
Old Speckled Hen (from a hand pump)
Duchesse du Bourgogne
Narragansett Lager
Gaffel Kölsch
Fullers London Pride
A properly pulled Guinness in Dublin
#22
Posted 02 October 2008 - 03:48 AM
I like beer!!!
Modelo Especial
Blue Moon
Dos Equis
Leffe
MGD Light
Pacifico
I never saw the light with the Mexican and American style beers like MGD/ Dos Equis /etc. Here they are described colloquially as - "sex in a canoe". Red Stripe is another I can't see the charm of. They sell enough, so I assume the fault lies in me.
Leffe, on the other hand - yum. I have a soft spot for the Radieuse.
Penguin - I did like the Big Rock stuff when I was over there - the traditional ale was a beauty. The Granville Island brews are very very nice; the Kits Maple Cream Ale is one I remember fondly. I think there was a good brewery out of Nelson BC - do you know it?
Fan Down Under - what's wrong with Little Creatures - I assume you mean their pale ale? I quite like it.
I have this in the fridge, so I'll mention it here:
http://www.grand-ridge.com.au/flash.asp
Grand Ridge Gippsland Gold. Fairly leaps down your throat.
Cheers all.
This post has been edited by option: 02 October 2008 - 03:50 AM
And saying so to some
Means nothing; others it leaves
Nothing to be said.
#23
Posted 02 October 2008 - 04:10 AM
Penguin - I did like the Big Rock stuff when I was over there - the traditional ale was a beauty. The Granville Island brews are very very nice; the Kits Maple Cream Ale is one I remember fondly. I think there was a good brewery out of Nelson BC - do you know it?
Yeah - the Nelson Brewing Company. Haven't tried any of their products though (sad especially considering we were in Nelson this past summer!).
Of course, you could also go 2 hours east to Creston, BC, home of the Columbia Brewing Company makers of Kokanee (blech) and the infamous sasquatch!!!
#24
Posted 02 October 2008 - 04:35 AM
A few favorites, in no particular order-
Rochefort 10
Old Speckled Hen (from a hand pump)
Duchesse du Bourgogne
Narragansett Lager
Gaffel Kölsch
Fullers London Pride
A properly pulled Guinness in Dublin
I'll vote for Frueh Kölsch instead, though I liked Gaffel as well
I'll also put in a word for Theakston's Bitter.
. . .
Fan Down Under - what's wrong with Little Creatures - I assume you mean their pale ale? I quite like it.
. . .
I suspect Fan Down Under is from SA (there must be some reason he picked Southwark!) - for me the Little Creatures pale ale is too sweet and fruity for their climate; but perfect for Melbourne.
#25
Posted 02 October 2008 - 04:53 AM
Hmmm, sasquatch hunters...
Good ads, terrible beer. F'n close to water, to explain Runitout's earlier analogy.
I'll vote for Frueh Kölsch instead, though I liked Gaffel as well
I'll also put in a word for Theakston's Bitter.
I suspect Fan Down Under is from SA (there must be some reason he picked Southwark!) - for me the Little Creatures pale ale is too sweet and fruity for their climate; but perfect for Melbourne.
I think you're right. You can't find Southwark elsewhere, anyway.
One or two Little Creatures and I need to change beers: too fruity after a while. On a really stinking hot day, I don't mind a bitter, bitter lager, just to wet the whistle. Any of the Australian commercial beers do the trick, with the obvious exceptions that must never be drunk (Carlton Cold, West End, Emu Bitter, Tooheys Red).
Oh, and the old rule: if it comes in a clear bottle, avoid.
#26
Posted 02 October 2008 - 05:16 AM
Hmmm, sasquatch hunters...
Good ads, terrible beer. F'n close to water, to explain Runitout's earlier analogy.
I'm impressed that you actually know about Kokanee and their ads, being from Down Under. You'll be sad to know that they killed off the Ranger. However, his lovely sasquatch hunter assistants are alive and well!!
#27
Posted 02 October 2008 - 08:02 AM
Three Sheets to the Wind: One Man's Quest for the Meaning of Beer
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Three-Sheets-Wind-...4341&sr=8-1
A fun read, where the author basically goes around the world drinking beer. Whole chapter dedicated to the beers of NW USA - where he likes the Micro Breweries. Lots of funny, flippant comments relating to Anheuser and their banning of some Czech town naming a beer after said Czech town. Very informative. Very witty.
I would have loved to have written that book and done what he did
PS - yes, Koelsch rocks. Fond memories from a school football exchange trip (I was the goalie) from 1990 to Koeln. Same time as reunification, so lots of beer being drank
#28
Posted 02 October 2008 - 10:14 AM
Is it worrying to be thinking about Duvel at 12.30h at work?
#29
Posted 02 October 2008 - 10:25 AM
I ate some "Mexican" a few weeks ago, I'm not ready to repeat the experience.
Big Rock traditional ale, mmmmm.
#30
Posted 02 October 2008 - 10:34 AM
. . .
PS - yes, Koelsch rocks. Fond memories from a school football exchange trip (I was the goalie) from 1990 to Koeln. Same time as reunification, so lots of beer being drank
You've lived my dream!
Maybe this settles the location for our next WP end of season trip. As long as it's VdB's shout - that Koelsch can induce significant wallet pain at leaving time . . .
. . .
Is it worrying to be thinking about Duvel at 12.30h at work?
Nah - you can just claim it as a hangover from you're time in Prague - beer and lunch seemed to go together there quite well as far as I could see . . . though it's been a decade or so since I was there.
This post has been edited by Jimmy: 02 October 2008 - 10:37 AM
#31
Posted 02 October 2008 - 10:42 AM
Nah - you can just claim it as a hangover from you're time in Prague - beer and lunch seemed to go together there quite well as far as I could see . . . though it's been a decade or so since I was there.
He was a good guy so he wasn't being pedantic about it, but he was making these half-joking remarks that made it quite clear to me that such a thing was 'not done' in Holland. (of course, I just told him that we're not in Holland
Btw, it's perfectly ok to have a beer at lunch over here too. But Duvel is a bit excessive.
#32
Posted 02 October 2008 - 11:50 AM
Agree on the Gaffel - I once enjoyed a frosty keg of it with a few mates on a starry, freezing night in an outdoors hot tub!
However: I have had Old Speckled Hen both from the bottle and off tap, and however little I may know of ales, it was just about completely flat of the tap - is it meant to be that way?
#33
Posted 02 October 2008 - 11:50 AM
He was a good guy so he wasn't being pedantic about it, but he was making these half-joking remarks that made it quite clear to me that such a thing was 'not done' in Holland. (of course, I just told him that we're not in Holland
Btw, it's perfectly ok to have a beer at lunch over here too. But Duvel is a bit excessive.
i can assure you, that its a "done thing" in Holland too, at least in Amsterdam and especially if the sun makes an appearance. Maar gewoon bier niet iets bijzonder.
A Palm is fine. Palm and Man bijt Hond are the best things Belguim has ever produced. That and some bloody war stories.
Brouwerij 't IJ beers are about the best from around here. If you ever get to Amsterdam, you really gotta visit it VDB.
#34
Posted 02 October 2008 - 01:14 PM
I'm impressed that you actually know about Kokanee and their ads, being from Down Under. You'll be sad to know that they killed off the Ranger. However, his lovely sasquatch hunter assistants are alive and well!!
I'm not sure how Drongo knows about the Kokanee ads - he seems to be an encyclopaedic freak (er, in a good way, Drongo!) but I know about them having lived in BC for a year.
"Dare to dream, Arnold... dare to dream" became a catch phrase for about two years ...
But yes, Kokanee tastes like sex in a canoe as well. Given the ads, that's somehow apt.
This post has been edited by option: 02 October 2008 - 01:15 PM
And saying so to some
Means nothing; others it leaves
Nothing to be said.
#35
Posted 02 October 2008 - 02:34 PM
Most everything from Texas is horse pee.
Most but not all and I am sure you have never tried this http://www.saintarnold.com/
Fan Down Under are you drinking that MDG in your part of the world? If so then you need to know but may already know that the MDG in other parts of the world is better than here in the USA. Same goes for those Budwiper people.
Beer good......mmmme likes
Spatan makes good beer NFD.
This post has been edited by OAR: 02 October 2008 - 02:35 PM
#36
Posted 02 October 2008 - 03:10 PM
The only problem w/NW micro-brews is that there's a competition to see who can out-hop each other, so you get a lot of beers that are brutally bitter. Actually, Brutal Bitter is the name of one of the local ales.
Forums are funny things: ordinarily I don't think about beer at 8 in the morning.
#37
Posted 02 October 2008 - 03:27 PM
I'm not sure how Drongo knows about the Kokanee ads - he seems to be an encyclopaedic freak (er, in a good way, Drongo!) but I know about them having lived in BC for a year.
"Dare to dream, Arnold... dare to dream" became a catch phrase for about two years ...
But yes, Kokanee tastes like sex in a canoe as well. Given the ads, that's somehow apt.
Never tried it, but I am assuming sex in a canoe is good right?
#38
Posted 02 October 2008 - 03:57 PM
Never tried it, but I am assuming sex in a canoe is good right?
I have heard sex in a canoe is good but also heard it is easy to flip over.
#39
Posted 02 October 2008 - 04:56 PM
Never tried it, but I am assuming sex in a canoe is good right?
It's a Canadian right of passage. If you get what I mean. It's sort of like a list of attributes you would like your mate to have...ie top ten list....canoes=skinnydipping=sexy shennigans in a canoe....and you thought us Canuckers were stodgy lovers....it's quite a feat of athletics!
#40
Posted 02 October 2008 - 05:12 PM
I live in Seattle and can heartily testify to the amazing variety of great beers here<snip>
Agree there, I was fortunate enought to visit Seattle a couple of years ago and the beer truly is excellent.

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