What's your favorite beer style?

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What's your favorite beer style?

  • Pilsner

  • Stout

  • IPA

  • Ale

  • Amber/Red

  • Porter

  • Lambic

  • Belgian

  • Hefeweisen/Wheat

  • Dunkel/Dark


Results are only viewable after voting.
Jun 26, 2007
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if you want to be pedantic a stout is any high alcohol content beer.

lagers are more difficult to brew than ales. i suppose that's why there's so many ales on the market.

yeah that explains why guiness extra stout is a low alcohol content beer and so are all other drinkable stouts.

There are probably more lagers than ales on the market.
 
Jun 26, 2007
11,925
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Wow, no one knows anything about beer in the US? Stick to bud light then at least you can understand what you are drinking you poor sods.
 

Quasmo

Diamond Member
Jul 7, 2004
9,630
1
76
I've taken a liking to bourbon barrel aged beers lately. Founder's KBS Wyerbacher Crumudgeon, stuff like that. Smooth flavor, amazing taste. I also really like chipotle porter's. They're very rare but they burn so good. I've had the MeKeller Chipotle porter in bottle and the Stone chipotle porter on cask. excellent beers.

If I can't find either of those styles, a good scotch ale or an imperial IPA is more my style.
 

preslove

Lifer
Sep 10, 2003
16,754
63
91
Wow, no one knows anything about beer in the US? Stick to bud light then at least you can understand what you are drinking you poor sods.

Considering the fact that you only drink guiness, yet live in a country with some of the best ales on the planet on tap at most pubs, you come off as a poseur who fell in love with a brand instead of developing actual taste.

I drank a ton of beer during my six months in London, and Guinness was meh compared to most of the English beer I had over there. Jesus hume christ, dude, you live in a country with premium cask ales at almost every pub, and YOU ONLY DRINK GUINESS?

Show some fucking English pride and drink some Bitters and shut up about that over rated Irish stout.
 
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vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,483
8,344
126
if you want to be pedantic a stout is any high alcohol content beer.

lagers are more difficult to brew than ales. i suppose that's why there's so many ales on the market.

If you want to get into brewing terms a stout always has roasted malts while a porter almost never does. And those malts are only there for color, aroma and flavor. They have no impact on the alcohol content. At least thats how most craft and homebrewers role.
 

KMFJD

Lifer
Aug 11, 2005
30,031
45,261
136
Considering the fact that you only drink guiness, yet live in a country with some of the best ales on the planet on tap at most pubs, you come off as a poseur who fell in love with a brand instead of developing actual taste.

I drank a ton of beer during my six months in London, and Guinness was meh compared to most of the English beer I had over there. . Jesus, dude, you live in a country with premium cask ales at almost every pub, and YOU ONLY DRINK GUINESS?

Show some fucking English pride and drink some Bitters and shut up about that over rated Irish stout.

That shit tastes like someone spilled a real beer in some peat moss, then squeezed all the liquid out into a bottle, fucking horrible shit

/Guiness that is
 

Avalon

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2001
7,567
156
106
I've taken a liking to bourbon barrel aged beers lately. Founder's KBS Wyerbacher Crumudgeon, stuff like that. Smooth flavor, amazing taste. I also really like chipotle porter's. They're very rare but they burn so good. I've had the MeKeller Chipotle porter in bottle and the Stone chipotle porter on cask. excellent beers.

If I can't find either of those styles, a good scotch ale or an imperial IPA is more my style.

Try North Coast Old Stock Cellar Reserve 2009. It's expensive, but it's about the best bourbon barrel beer I've tried.
 

Avalon

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2001
7,567
156
106
If you want to get into brewing terms a stout always has roasted malts while a porter almost never does. And those malts are only there for color, aroma and flavor. They have no impact on the alcohol content. At least thats how most craft and homebrewers role.

This is pretty much the case. Porters tend to come from mostly pale malts nowadays. Stouts will use chocolate malts and black malts more often.

Also John, yes, the term stout used to stand for a higher alcohol beer, usually a higher alcohol porter. You need to relax.
 
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vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,483
8,344
126
You do realise that a wheat is a proper Pilsner and that a Pilsner was available 700 years before anyone knew what the fuck a lager was?

Uh, Pilsners were first brewed in Plzen, CZ in 1842. It's one of the "youngest" beer styles out there. They are a lager style beer that use pale malts. They are nothing like a wheat ale. I have no idea what you babbling about.
 

AstroManLuca

Lifer
Jun 24, 2004
15,628
5
81
Considering the fact that you only drink guiness, yet live in a country with some of the best ales on the planet on tap at most pubs, you come off as a poseur who fell in love with a brand instead of developing actual taste.

I drank a ton of beer during my six months in London, and Guinness was meh compared to most of the English beer I had over there. Jesus hume christ, dude, you live in a country with premium cask ales at almost every pub, and YOU ONLY DRINK GUINESS?

Show some fucking English pride and drink some Bitters and shut up about that over rated Irish stout.

JohnOfSheffield status:

[ ] not told
[ ] told
[X] NO COUNTRY FOR TOLD MEN
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,483
8,344
126
I drank a ton of beer during my six months in London, and Guinness was meh compared to most of the English beer I had over there. Jesus hume christ, dude, you live in a country with premium cask ales at almost every pub, and YOU ONLY DRINK GUINESS?

Our drinking palates have been screwed up by modern beer styles with artificial carbonation and nitrogen being added to the drinks. Cask ales almost taste flat/stale by comparison because we are expecting some fiz or bubble to them.

Personally I love the style. My local brewpub has a cask IPA regularly on hand that is one of the most smooth, mellow IPA's I've ever drank. But it's not for everyone because it requires you to recalibrate what you've come to expect from beer.
 

preslove

Lifer
Sep 10, 2003
16,754
63
91
Our drinking palates have been screwed up by modern beer styles with artificial carbonation and nitrogen being added to the drinks. Cask ales almost taste flat/stale by comparison because we are expecting some fiz or bubble to them.

Personally I love the style. My local brewpub has a cask IPA regularly on hand that is one of the most smooth, mellow IPA's I've ever drank. But it's not for everyone because it requires you to recalibrate what you've come to expect from beer.

Sure, it takes some getting used to, but it's what England does well. Basically, over there if a pub isn't In-Bev dominated (unfortunately a lot of pubs/bars only sell In-Bev), then the best beers on tap will be cask ales. Hell it's part of English culture. If you are English and you don't like cask ales, then you don't know shit about beer.
 

dougp

Diamond Member
May 3, 2002
7,909
4
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Sure, it takes some getting used to, but it's what England does well. Basically, over there if a pub isn't In-Bev dominated (unfortunately a lot of pubs/bars only sell In-Bev), then the best beers on tap will be cask ales. Hell it's part of English culture. If you are English and you don't like cask ales, then you don't know shit about beer.

It's actually law. In-Bev needs to quit buying local breweries and fucking them up over there.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,483
8,344
126
It's actually law. In-Bev needs to quit buying local breweries and fucking them up over there.

A/B did the same thing here. They bought out Rolling Rock/Latrobe and shut them down only keeping the name. Other brands they just outright bullied out of the market through undermining distributors and sellers. It's quite shocking just how many labels are under the A/B umbrella and now under the InBev global dominance.
 

dougp

Diamond Member
May 3, 2002
7,909
4
0
A/B did the same thing here. They bought out Rolling Rock/Latrobe and shut them down only keeping the name. Other brands they just outright bullied out of the market through undermining distributors and sellers. It's quite shocking just how many labels are under the A/B umbrella and now under the InBev global dominance.

Yah but over here, we're not required by law to sell local beer over nationally distributed beers ;)

It'd be akin to AB/InBev buying out Shiner, Saint Arnolds, 512, Live Oak, Rahr & Sons, Southern Star, etc. all in TX

Wow, that'd blow ass. :(
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,483
8,344
126
Yah but over here, we're not required by law to sell local beer over nationally distributed beers

No, but the way that the distribution model is configured here in the US all but monopolizes who can distribute beer. A/B controls something like 80% of all beer distributed in the US. And they only distribute their own brands. So 80% of all beer distributed in the US is(was) under the A/B corporate branding.

The beer industry is the second highest in political donations in which A/B accounted for like 75% of the donations. They make their own rules.
 

foghorn67

Lifer
Jan 3, 2006
11,883
63
91
Yah but over here, we're not required by law to sell local beer over nationally distributed beers ;)

It'd be akin to AB/InBev buying out Shiner, Saint Arnolds, 512, Live Oak, Rahr & Sons, Southern Star, etc. all in TX

Wow, that'd blow ass. :(
You would mourn over Shiner? That stuff tastes like Baltimore harbor water.
 

Avalon

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2001
7,567
156
106
Pilsner Urquell served from the tap in the Czech Republic is about as good as it gets for me!

My buddy who went to Europe constantly tells me how amazing some of the Czech beers on tap are over there. Wish I could go :(
 
Nov 29, 2006
15,692
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I just picked up a sixer of Avery White Rascal over lunch. Anyone had it before? I usually like belgian whites so figured id try this one.