My tolerance is about 30 days for a NEIPA, and between 3-6 months for other light beers, IPA/Kolsch/Lagers, etc., preferably on the lower side.
We are definitely on the same page here. We had some NEIPA's from Pure Project (San Diego) & Green Cheek (Orange County) that were less than a week old that we picked up at the breweries, and what a difference. Lately we have been keeping some Belching Beaver Deftones Phantom Bride IPA in the fridge as kind of a go to staple, and we have been able to get this within 3 weeks of canning from a local Walmart of all places. Kudos to Belching Beaver for dating their cans!
I lose my mind when I see a brewery have the audacity to tell me to "drink fresh" on the can and not provide a packaging date to tell me what "fresh" is.
LOL! What a perfect statement.
And even the best by dates keep getting longer without any way to know by just how much. I am seeing imports already on the shelves with dates that are 15-18 months in the future.
Until consumers demand dates and refuse to buy without, then distributors/breweries will have to reason no change their shady practices.
I saw a best by date on an IPA last night that was about 8 months out. If they put that date on there I would hope they are confident it will make it that long, but I won't by a beer with a best by date anymore, because like you said I have no way of knowing if it might already be 6 months old. This beer was not in a cooler though, and I wonder if they account for that?
It seems like there are a few of us out here that refuse to buy no dated beer, but my guess is that for every one of us there are 100 people that just go into a store and grab something off the shelf without ever looking. I think as homebrewers we have a better perspective that a lot of your average craft beer drinkers.
Sometimes, you have to look closely to find a date. This one (“local” in that it’s brewed here in MT) has the “canned on” date on the picture of the can on the outside of the cardboard 4-pack. Same date is on the cans inside.
Funny you mentioned that. I have seen some of those 4 pack and 6 pack cardboard boxes lately. I bought a fresh hop IPA a few months back that actually had a date on the outside of the box. What an awesome beer that was, and I knew it was only a few weeks old. Without a date I would have never bought it. I looked at a cardboard box 4 pack last night and couldn't find a date anywhere. I'm looking carefully too because usually if I pick it up it means I'm pretty interested in buying it.