sirsloop said:
There is a local brewpub in Princeton that serves porters and stouts out of a hand pump. I cant really make a comparison because they dont have a CO2 only version to compare with.
As far as being purist, drinking forced carbonated beer (or carbonated at all) thats anything but room temperature seems to be a contradiction to the goal! They certianly didnt have fridges or means to make ice other than what nature provided back in the day. Not tryin to be mean or anything... just your response kinda seemed out of place, considering.
But there is a difference between a beer that is carbonated and dispensed using a tank of pressurized CO2 and serving a beer that is naturally conditioned and serving it without using CO2 to push it into the glass.
I am no real ale evangelist or CAMRANazi, and I could really care less about how you feel beer should be enjoyed. I simply made a beer engine so that I could enjoy a real ale in a manner that real ale enthusiasts prefer it to be served.
If you are truly interested in the kind of beer and serving methods that I am discussing in this thread, perhaps you should look outside this thread for information regarding the tradition of beer engines and real, cask conditioned ale. Better yet, go ask the owner of the brewpub you reference why he/she chooses to serve stouts off of the beer engine rather than force it with CO2, since this is your question and my answer does not seem to satisfy you.
Additionally, when one refers to enjoying an historical tradition, that could mean any number of things. Traditionally, cask conditioned ale is not served at room temperature but at cellar temps around 50 degrees. My post above explains that I like it a bit cooler.
Beer engines and cask conditioned ale is not for everyone - obviously. You should feel fine pulling beers off of your tap with your CO2. For me, however, I enjoy richer and more meaningful "sessions" and pulling drafts off of my beer engine gives me that.
Sorry that you don't "get it."