Do you refrigerate beer?
Educate me (seriously), what did they have to do with refrigerating beer? I mean, I'm sure they did it, but it seems like a given to do so, even if they never existed, I think brewers would have started refrigerating beer
Do you refrigerate beer?
Educate me (seriously), what did they have to do with refrigerating beer? I mean, I'm sure they did it, but it seems like a given to do so, even if they never existed, I think brewers would have started refrigerating beer
Educate me (seriously), what did they have to do with refrigerating beer? I mean, I'm sure they did it, but it seems like a given to do so, even if they never existed, I think brewers would have started refrigerating beer
*Many different chemicals used to speed and enhance the brewing process. (This recipe not approved by the FDA.*
I am interested in this statement. In what "HUGE" way has BMC contributed to brewing higher quality beer?
Exactly
It was AB that first developed and utilized refridgerated rail cars to transport their beer across the country. Not only did this help beer keep longer, but it helped countless other industries as well. Meat packing, for one, could now ship frozen beef cross country as well.
Example: You can't expect the average Joe to reach for a berliner weisse as an after meal digestif because they are hard to find, hard to pronounce and if though unlikely he was a homebrewer, somewhat tricky to brew correctly, even with the right equipment and yeast strains/bacterias not to mention time consuming to ferment completely. No beer would do it better in my opinion, yet I, a not so average "beer Joe" could not find a single berliner weisse to drink, and I am within 5 miles of three extraordinarily "well stocked in beer" liquor type stores.
While you and Peg are off blowing each other full of self righteousness, the rest of us will now take a step back and enjoy our pints. Pick up a book and educate yourself before you try to attack somebody because you don't like the product they peddle. Money speaks louder than words on an internet forum.
It's just beer.
What did BMC contribute to these things?
Lager and refrigeration go hand in hand since a yeast strain was discovered that thrives in cold but there was no way to have cold temps except winter. So through research and engineering a product was created to fit a need.
Yeast management and storage are a huge concern especially when pitching gallons of yeast a day and in some cases per batch. Really that should be self explanatory.
Kegs were designed for longevity and simplicity of use as opposed to wooden barrel storage which imparts unwanted flavors and they breakdown over time.
Colored bottles, canning, mechanized production lines and the list goes on, all to make a better product in higher quantity with the highest deliverable consistency possible.
Brewing was the first activity in the northern states to use mechanical refrigeration extensively, beginning with an absorption machine used by S. Liebmann’s Sons Brewing Company in Brooklyn, New York in 1870.**Commercial refrigeration was primarily directed at breweries in the 1870s and by 1891, nearly every brewery was equipped with refrigerating machines.
I hope I can go about this in a way in which others won't accuse me of being self-righteous.
Lagers were around before AHB and were initially fermented in caves or basement cellars where they could be kept at a consistently cool temperature for long periods of time during fermentation. I don't really see any leaps and bounds AHB had to make in order to figure out that a refrigerator could be a suitable replacement for a cave or cellar. I am also not sure that AHB was the first to do so.
I am legitimately interested in how AHB improved yeast management and storage. I wish you would explain that to me or point me towards a resource that can explain what processes they invented and contributed to the world of beer brewing.
I don't see canning (which I don't think AHB started) or mechanized production lines as being at all necessary to brewing excellent craft beer.
Brown bottles are good. But, I can't find anything that says AHB came up with the idea.
I have never seen anything like what you have in those pictures.
What's the event? 50% off everything craft?
I can't possibly imagine that's a normal night, or even a Friday night, in Anytown, USA.
Brewing was the first activity in the northern states to use mechanical refrigeration extensively, beginning with an absorption machine used by S. Liebmanns Sons Brewing Company in Brooklyn, New York in 1870.**Commercial refrigeration was primarily directed at breweries in the 1870s and by 1891, nearly every brewery was equipped with refrigerating machines.
Don't worry this isn't an argument, at least I don't think it is.
.While you and Peg are off blowing each other full of self righteousness, the rest of us will now take a step back and enjoy our pints. Pick up a book and educate yourself before you try to attack somebody because you don't like the product they peddle. Money speaks louder than words on an internet forum.
It's just beer.
I must be missing something.
Refrigeration was invented for other uses by other people. It was later utilized for beer.
Also, did S. Liebmann's Sons Brewing Company become BMC or what?
Couple things stand out here as patently fallacious, mainly that they don't cut corners as every comlanies goal is to cut every corner they can get away with. You bet they shop grain, hop annd yeast prices and buy the least expensive they can and get away with. They bring a lot of the process in house because it lowers the cost of production in the end, paying a monkey $10 an hour to mill grain nets them x amount in savings and same goes for other processes.
I am not saying they use fillers in place of actual grains but if they can find a way to do it and provide the same flavor don't think for a minute they wouldn't or won't do it.
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There is meat behind our suspicion there, sport, y don't u not attack us without doing proper research urself. Now this was a 30 yrs ago, but who's to say it has completely changed?....I'd be willing to believe there's still some crazy stuff in there. Maybe, maybe not
"Miller Lite at one point contained several ingredients not normally found in beer, including manufactured chemical additives. The Center for Science in the Public Interest reported in 1982 that Miller Lite contained propylene glycol, alginate (a seaweed extract), water, barley malt, corn syrup, chemically-modified hop extracts, yeast, amyloglucosidase, carbon dioxide, papain enzyme, liquid sugar, potassium metabisulfite, and Emka malt (a food coloring). "
I can't believe that this thread is still so active.. Is the fight still the same??
jbaysurfer said:I think the OPs assertion that AB/InBev: "they're trying to kill craft brews"
Has become the topic of discussion rather then what I consider to be a very valid, salient and pretty much well accepted concept in the industry that they are predatory in nature with their marketing/merchandising and legal practices.
I don't like that style of beer at all, but even if I did, I'd drink Yuengling...not Budweiser.
They (AB/InBev) are basically the Microsoft of the industry IMHO, they buy out their competitors if they can and reformulate their product for mass production or if they can't do that they try to sue them at every opportunity. Sorry..I recognize these are typical big business practices..but that doesn't mean they're not *********erous.