I do a mix of name and style. For example my last brew was a red using local ingredients so I named it Pacific NorthRed (I have another brewed with a pinecone in the mash called Redwoods).
This entire thread reeks of cultural insensitivity and beer snobbery, and in a few instances, straight racism. Beer standards aren't set by predominately white, Western European culture. The large majority of this thread has been advice to retreat to the relative safety of German or Belgian or...
Agreed.
Also, I imagine a large swath (maybe not all) of people here would overall praise Free Market Capitalism as working, and our Representative Democracy as a good system.
However when you put those two things together, you get the sort of monopolizing aggregation of those who tried...
I used it in a test batch for my competition red. It's pretty true to its name, the clearer the beer gets, the more it has this pearlescent red shine through it. I'm happy with it.
Although, for my final competition red I don't think I'll use it.
It might fall within style guidelines SRM but I think, given the amout of LME and gold/pale that you may be on the amber side of red. It probably wont be ruby red.
But, if it's styled like a red and it tastes like a red, then it's a red.
One thing to think about regarding both questions is the depth of knowledge. You can make really good beer in your kitchen, but if you're only giving it to family and friends, the science underneath isn't quite as important.
That said, distributing to the public (at any level) is going to...
This is actually something I see people reacting differently to. On the one hand, and I am in this camp, I see the difference of "brewer" and "homebrewer" being a title earned through experience, in this case commercial.
For example, you could teach a class at a college, but that doesn't make...
That's true. This is an interesting perspective, whereas before I viewed two markets, neither of which would grow or intersect (BMC and Non-BMC). However, with InBev's strategy of diversifying their umbrella of different brands, the BMC market may actually start to envelop the non-BMC market by...
I agree. I think on some level too there's a David and Goliath feeling to seeing stacks and stacks of BMC next to one or two six packs of smaller brewery stuff.
Tyson sells chicken that will taste just as delicious on the grill as any other (if I'm grilling ;)) but I'd rather support local...
I would never turn that down!
True, and I meant no disrespect. I more meant to highlight the difference between beer drinkers who know the process, who understand what makes a truly good beer, and those who think all beer is the same.
This is interesting to me. I think you're right, you...