Only thing I ever noticed different is less/no hangover in the morning. Beer gets me drunk as well as spirits, liqueurs, or wine.
I agree that EtOH affects all walks of life a little differently and that, subjectively, to you, it might not matter what bolus of alcoholic beverage you are taking. But to the some others, I merely stated the physiological facts that would explain others' experiences with different beverages. To say its completely neurological and fabricated by your psyche would be naive. I provided physiological facts that would explain the different ammounts of EtOH that would reach your CNS based on the type of bolus ingested and help explain the differences perceived by the OP. I didnt make anything up but again, I cant provide evidence of bolus vs CNS EtOH delivery in the literature, I merely extrapolated on already available evidence involving other drugs. The literature I read doesnt really care about the short term effects of drinking.
-Jefe-
so in your expertise would you say that drinking different kinds of booze will lead to "significantly" (ie. easily noticeable/observable) differences in 'buzz'. And when i say different i mean it not in the sense of more or less drunk but as in a different form of buzz, which is what I believe the OP meant by different as well. Much in the same way that different kinds of drugs give different 'highs' not just degrees of the same high. or are all these variables between say beer and whiskey just minor differences that no reasonable person could claim to actually feel the difference between them (i obviously mean this in the sense that if the psychological ie. convincing oneself, could be taken out of the equation, that it really noticeably exists)
sorry if that was too wordy, but I am trying to be clear... please Jefe do your best to respond
different bolus, causes different absorbent rates
I'm not buying the different buzzes from home brew vs. store bought beer of the same or similar ABV and malt profile.
i'd say i get a more openly, mentally active buzz from homebrew and a beer like aventinus (heady, strong, unfiltered).
thanks for the factual medical/scientific insight Jefe... this thread has been fun to read while researching buzz differences. especially the people that have no clue what you're talking about essentially disagreeing with you based on their perceptions. It's like the guy that's never even been to college telling his fellow blue collar coworker buddies at work how dumb his doctor is.I agree that EtOH affects all walks of life a little differently and that, subjectively, to you, it might not matter what bolus of alcoholic beverage you are taking. But to the some others, I merely stated the physiological facts that would explain others' experiences with different beverages. To say its completely neurological and fabricated by your psyche would be naive. I provided physiological facts that would explain the different ammounts of EtOH that would reach your CNS based on the type of bolus ingested and help explain the differences perceived by the OP. I didnt make anything up but again, I cant provide evidence of bolus vs CNS EtOH delivery in the literature, I merely extrapolated on already available evidence involving other drugs. The literature I read doesnt really care about the short term effects of drinking.
-Jefe-
I also don't get as bad a hangover when I drink HB
I've noticed this effect not with homebrew specifically but with different classes of drinks. Red wine often makes me feel tired and irritable whereas a good clean vodka or gin relaxes me. Some high ABV brews give me a "fuzzy" kind of feeling without much buzz... hard to explain. Most good beer gives me a pleasant buzz with a craving for more beer.