bchurch
Well-Known Member
I personally don't like Triumph in Philly all their beers taste like they took a glass of water and added two shots of beer in it.
They'll have stuff like fish and chips where the fish is salmon. Or the burgers are made out of unicorn and magic beans served with a side of kale.
A lot of places here in the south don't even have beer lists. What the hell is with that?!? And when I ask what they have (at several places down here) the waitress will say 9 times out of 10, "OH, the usual stuff!" and walk away. It also kills me when I have to ask what they have that isn't light beer, and they don't have a clue. /endrant![]()
A lot of places in Canada are the same. I get great success by ordering a pint of "whatever's on tap that nobody ever seems to order". It's usually their best (often only) craft beer.
I'm gonna have to try that next time I get a clueless server. That gets under my skin like you wouldn't believe. I don't want to sit there and have you guess for 15 minutes to see what you "might have". I've even had a waitress go check, and come back with a handwritten beer list. Pathetic. Which reminds me, a local pizza joint told me that R.J. Rockers Bell Ringer, which is an 8.0% American Strong Ale, is "Like one of those darker beers...I think?"
We are pretty lucky here in se Michigan when it come to how many brewpubs there are. There are unfortunately several that are subpar.
The good ones by beer quality alone are:
1. Dragonmead (every beer in the place is top notch even if is a style you don't care for it will be a top notch product)
2. Bastone (if you love Belgian beers this place is killer. Excellent pizza)
3. Malty Dog Brewey (small place lots of solid brews to choose from. Best stout in SE Michigan possibly the state)
4. Cj's brewing company (awesome food solid brews)
5. Kuhnhenn brewing company (their Dripa is one of the best IPA's you will ever find)
6. Arbor Brewing Company.
6. Black Lotus.
7. Royal Oak Brewery (good eats and a few decent brews. they make a wee heavy that is to die for)
8. Witches hat
9. Jolly pumpkin (only if you like sour beer.)
What one is that? I have been to beer revolution which is awesome and pacific coast brewing which is meh.
I wouldn't know, since I've never had their beers. If their beers suck, then yes, I'm talking about them.
I'm a big fan of sour beers, don't get me wrong. I was at a beer bar (also nameless) who had one of the Bear Republic beers on tap (Red Rocket, IIRC). Either the keg or the lines were infected, I'm not sure which, but the restaurant knew about it, and were serving it as a "special, one-off" sour beer.
I also generally think it's a red flag when people call themselves an "artisan." That's what other people will say about you if you make good beer.
Don't you hate it when you go to a brewpub and order a beer only to get a beer that just isn't that good?
I went to a place over the weekend and ordered their IPA. I had to send it back it was so bad. The beer either had an infection or their lines needed cleaned badly.
The second beer was just ok. Both mine and my wife's beer were fairly flat and had no head whatsoever. They obviously don't know how to balance their system.
It was just sad. If you're going to run a brewpub, at least bother to know what the hell you're doing.
How does Founders and/or Bells not make this list?
Toga said:We are pretty lucky here in se Michigan when it come to how many brewpubs there are. There are unfortunately several that are subpar.
The good ones by beer quality alone are:
1. Dragonmead (every beer in the place is top notch even if is a style you don't care for it will be a top notch product)
2. Bastone (if you love Belgian beers this place is killer. Excellent pizza)
3. Malty Dog Brewey (small place lots of solid brews to choose from. Best stout in SE Michigan possibly the state)
4. Cj's brewing company (awesome food solid brews)
5. Kuhnhenn brewing company (their Dripa is one of the best IPA's you will ever find)
6. Arbor Brewing Company.
6. Black Lotus.
7. Royal Oak Brewery (good eats and a few decent brews. they make a wee heavy that is to die for)
8. Witches hat
9. Jolly pumpkin (only if you like sour beer.)
Places to stay away from
1. copper canyon brewery (some type of infection in every glass)
2. Atwater brewing company (just awful)
3. Motor City brewing works
4. Liberty Street (very inconsistent. more infucted brews)
heferly said:those are southwest-ish michigan![]()
TheBeerist said:This seems like the beer equivalent of a bunch of out of shape middle-aged guys sitting on their sofas and yelling at the TV while their favorite team is losing, and how they should be doing it better.
It's one thing to make a great 5 gallon batch of beer in the comfort of your home.
It's another thing all together when you're brewing to support yourself, AND trying to do it in volume.
I'll take comfort in the fact that whoever you are (yes you, reading this right now) there is probably someone in your industry that thinks that you suck as well.
This seems like the beer equivalent of a bunch of out of shape middle-aged guys sitting on their sofas and yelling at the TV while their favorite team is losing, and how they should be doing it better.
It's one thing to make a great 5 gallon batch of beer in the comfort of your home.
It's another thing all together when you're brewing to support yourself, AND trying to do it in volume.
I'll take comfort in the fact that whoever you are (yes you, reading this right now) there is probably someone in your industry that thinks that you suck as well.
CGVT said:Really?
If you are going to make a product and expect it to sell well enough to support you, you should probably do it well.
If someone in my industry thinks that I suck, I would probably be out of a job, the same as a brewer that produces a ****ty product.
I guess that we can take comfort in the fact that brewers with a lousy attitude that produce lousy beer will most likely soon be out of business and will be unable to subject us to a sub par product.
This seems like the beer equivalent of a bunch of out of shape middle-aged guys sitting on their sofas and yelling at the TV while their favorite team is losing, and how they should be doing it better.
It's one thing to make a great 5 gallon batch of beer in the comfort of your home.
It's another thing all together when you're brewing to support yourself, AND trying to do it in volume.
I'll take comfort in the fact that whoever you are (yes you, reading this right now) there is probably someone in your industry that thinks that you suck as well.
This seems like the beer equivalent of a bunch of out of shape middle-aged guys sitting on their sofas and yelling at the TV while their favorite team is losing, and how they should be doing it better.