Yuengling that good? The first time I ever heard about it I thought it was a chinese beer I live in Philly so I have access... maybe I'll try it sometime.
agreed. it is totally worth breaking the transport of alcohol over state lines law just to bring back a trunk full.
there are such laws? Woah.
I know, at least I think I know, that such laws exist for fireworks since they are not legal in every state, but uh.. alcohol? WTH Nation?!
We *transported* a certain 190 proof alcohol across state lines once. :twisted:
Yuengling that good? The first time I ever heard about it I thought it was a chinese beer I live in Philly so I have access... maybe I'll try it sometime.
yes, it is truly that good... its heavier, but not overly, it has no underlying crappy taste, it tastes GOOD... there is a reason its the oldest brewery in the US
Oldest surviving brewery. Certainly not the first, though.
Prohibition more or less destroyed the industry for decades. AB survived by expanding its patented refrigerated rail car tech into other markets. I have no idea how Yeungling survived, though--but I'm glad they did.
there are such laws? Woah.
I know, at least I think I know, that such laws exist for fireworks since they are not legal in every state, but uh.. alcohol? WTH Nation?!
We may, or may not, had carried a certain cargo that may have contained a certain 190 proof alcohol, across what may, or may not, have been a state line.
I know many people who go to Indiana to purchase Everclear, perhaps Dogfish Head 120min IPA, and more...
How Macro is it? Never seen it at any bars or liquor stores or markets any where here in Cali.
they have 120min here in Ohio....
not that I would ever touch that abomination. Would rather chew on a pine cone. Hell, the last IPA I had tasted like pinesol. Granted, the 60min tasted superior to that brew which I shall never refer to by name, but compared to my favorite beer types, IPAs are... my brain lacks words that can translate my personal feelings of betrayal by the brewers of IPAs.
Though Dogfish Head's Theobroma is obviously the nectar the gods used as inspiration for godly nectars.
to be fair, I guess it's smaller than Sam Adams, as Yeungling doesn't get too much further than the East Coast, unfortunately, but they are rather large in the tradition of AB/Miller.
At least, the type of beer they produce has that traditional "macro" style to it compared to Sam Adams, which is legitimately a macro brewery.