It's like the time I took my 1935 Duesenberg and spray-painted flames on it.
Yup, that's how I feel too. I use the BJCP Style Guidelines as just that, a guide. I know a lot of the beer judges out there will disagree, but I brew my way to brew what I like. Now if I was brewing a beer so I could maybe win a nice blue ribbon or something else to hang on the wall then I'd follow the style path more precisely.I just write a recipe, and if it fits a style, it's a coincidence.
Case in point - Low O2 brewing came from trying to copy the Germans... I think we've learned a lot about brewing science in just the last 6-7 years because of that.Yeah, I think it's ridiculous to try to tell other people how to brew. There has been so much innovation over the last two decades. How much would there have been if everyone was trying to copy someone else?
Oh no, you aren't. I just don't drink commercial beer anymore. I prefer drink water. Craft beer here, they just copy APA style. All citrus, fruit combined with high bitterness, that to me taste like spoiled fruit (sorry, didn't mean to hurt anyone's feelings) or with too much additives. Lactose, coffee, spices, far from something you can call balanced. I can't even buy a normal, regular saison here. Neither a stout. And Imported beers are just too expensive...I have to ask: am I the only one who prefers his own beer to nearly everything else?
I finished making my first post-comeback beer a few days ago, and I overcarbonated it. It took several days for it to recover so I could get a beer that wasn't all head at first and then low on bubbles. Today it's perfect. I can open the faucet all the way, and it gives me about 2.5 inches of foam and still has the carbonation zing it needs.
I had some Old Rasputin the other day, and it amazed me. It changed the way I think about beer. But other than that, I like my own brews best. And I'm not going to sit around every day drinking imperial stout. Most of the time, I'm going to want to be down around 6%.
I love a beer that's exactly what I imagined when I first tried to write the recipe. No matter how good factory beer is, it's not tailor-made.
I completely understand this. Even before I brewed, I preferred water or nothing to things like Budweiser and Miller.Oh no, you aren't. I just don't drink commercial beer anymore. I prefer drink water. Craft beer here, they just copy APA style. All citrus, fruit combined with high bitterness, that to me taste like spoiled fruit (sorry, didn't mean to hurt anyone's feelings) or with too much additives. Lactose, coffee, spices, far from something you can call balanced. I can't even buy a normal, regular saison here. Neither a stout. And Imported beers are just too expensive...
So, I just drink what I brew.
I thought Schaeffer was just PBR now, but maybe that still works for the nostalgia.I bought a case of Schaefer beer recently. Again, maybe nostalgia.
Yeah they are owned by Pabst now. Could still be a different recipe though. I saw an article recently saying they were even supposed to start brewing it in NY again.I thought Schaeffer was just PBR now, but maybe that still works for the nostalgia.
i might be my own favourite brewer but I'm probably not anybody else's! And I do enjoy getting out in the pubs and drinking cask ales. There are some very good cask pints out there these days, influenced by craft ale and competing with craft ale - the cask brewers have upped their game in my opinion. I've had a couple of cask ales by Brightside Brewing in Manchester UK recently that were delicious. Both used American hops.
There are a few threads on here how to emulate a cask. Theres one article about turning a corny keg on its side and venting through the dip tube and drawing beer out of the gas port. There is another one about people using collapseable cubitainers.The combination of those hops with English malt and yeast via a beer engine is something special when it's done well. I can make similar beers but not with that cask condition.
I don't see it as blasphemy - just a choice. I like all trad British ales, and I like versions with new ingredients. Plus, American hops were being used in British breweries many years ago.I know more and more UK breweries are using American hops but thats still blasphemy to me with these beers.
There are a few threads on here how to emulate a cask. There's one article about turning a corny keg on its side and venting through the dip tube and drawing beer out of the gas port. I agree though, there’s something special about a beer engine. I have one and I don’t use it nearly enough. Because the beer spoils too quickly and I can’t even go through 3 gallons or a half batch by myself fast enough. I’ve thought many times about how to hook a beer engine to a 5L minikeg and never even found a way to do that.
Brewing beers I can’t easily get, like British ales, was one of the reasons I wanted to start brewing.
I’m a big fan of First GoldI don't see it as blasphemy - just a choice. I like all trad British ales, and I like versions with new ingredients. Plus, American hops were being used in British breweries many years ago.
I'm a small batch bottler, I am not likely to start building draught systems at home. As cool as that would be. It's good to hear of people enjoying British stuff around the world. I'm not particularly patriotic but I love British beer and I fear for it and enjoy hearing about people treasuring it! And brewing it. And using English hops, cos that is a pretty fragile industry - not very many growers left now. Yes, imported hops partly to blame. There was a reported doubling of exports a few years ago. I hope that's still the case but I think it's not. Seems odd cos there must be a demand for UK Golding and Fuggle in other beer countries. Maybe tastes are just changing. Willamette does a similar job in a more modern taste way I guess.
Me too!I’m a big fan of First Gold
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