NuclearRich
Well-Known Member
Would gluten free beer count?
yeah thats malted. just not with gluten products. sorghum and such
Would gluten free beer count?
true, they use the enzymatic action from the 2% barley in the grist
True, they use the enzymatic action from the 2%barley in the grist
Ah gotchaNuclearRich said:yeah thats malted. just not with gluten products. sorghum and such
My Bud Light swilling neighbor calls any beer with hop character "skunky"I think the funniest thing I have heard was "my (insert crappy miller product here) went skunky" Despite the fact that it is in a can, and there are no compounds in that beer that can cause that particular defect.
I think the funniest thing I have heard was "my (insert crappy miller product here) went skunky" Despite the fact that it is in a can, and there are no compounds in that beer that can cause that particular defect.
My Bud Light swilling neighbor calls any beer with hop character "skunky"
NuclearRich said:yeah thats malted. just not with gluten products. sorghum and such
Not true. Barley and rye both contain gluten.This might be a stupid question, but why can't you make gluten free beer with barley again? Wheat is the only grain that contains gluten...
Ah, yes you are correct. I had forgotten that it was also present in related grain species.Not true. Barley and rye both contain gluten.
No such thing a stupid question in my mind!Ah, yes you are correct. I had forgotten that it was also present in related grain species.
So, yup. It was a stupid question.
No such thing a stupid question in my mind!![]()
"Can I get you another beer?" is typically a stupid question.
Today while buying 2013 Utopias:
Girl at counter: Whoa, $200?!
Me: Yes.
Girl: How many are in there? (points to box).
Me: Just one.
Girl: (silence and dumbfounded look).
Can't say I blame her. It was pretty rough handing over $200 on one bottle. I know it is a different animal but it was still tough after driving three hours to buy it.
While certainly not in the same price range or as exclusive, I wanted to try Brewdog's Tokyo when it was introduced here in Sweden. While as awesome as the state-owned store is, where you can more or less buy anything, sometimes there are limits.
You had to buy six of them, which at the time was 90 USD (a wee bit less expensive now). While I do have beer loving friends, none were willing to split the order. Now you can buy just one if you wanted to.
When I was paying the cashier said: "Damn, that's one expensive beer. Is it worth it?"
Me:"It damn well better be, but I have no friggin' idea!"
And it was worth it, it was hard not to drink them but the five I kept (gave away one) laster about a year. Still my favorite beer.
Also in retrospect, it was a weird buy. I had previously never had a good Brewdog beer (their Punk IPA or whatever it's called is just awful, IMHO), and I was still fairly new to craft beer goodness. Also not exactly rich.
Depends - is there a homebrewed cider available as well?"Can I get you another beer?" is typically a stupid question.
Ah, yes you are correct. I had forgotten that it was also present in related grain species.
So, yup. It was a stupid question.
No such thing a stupid question in my mind!![]()
For a lot of people "I don't drink" is a way to avoid trying something they've heard bad things about (homebrewed beer) without seeming like she's putting you down. Once she tried it and found it was actually good, things were different. I've pulled "I'm vegetarian" when someone offered me some really horribly cooked BBQ and I just didn't want to choke it down and pretend it's good. "I have a nut allergy" also works for things like fruitcake.![]()
Keith66 said:"Can I get you another beer?" is typically a stupid question.
Amen to that. In 9 years, I don't know if my wife has ever opened more than 2 beers for me, if that!amfukuda said:My grandpa's friend's wife knows exactly when his beer is empty and promptly brings him another with out him asking. I can only assume he is a wizard or has instituted a extensive training process either way I need him I show me his ways
I didn't overhear this, but a co-worker told me over lunch this week "I don't like beers with malt in them.
There's a gag I like to do when I have guests:
Me: "You wanna beer?"
Guest: "Sure!"
Me: They're in the fridge...get me one too."
WTF is a cream ale stout? Going by the name of the beer I'm guessing you mean milk stout (aka sweet stout, and, granted, occasionally referred to by the brewer of a given beer as simply "cream stout")? But a "cream ale" is something very specific, and specifically very different from anything that could ever be called a stout.
Tallgrass Buffalo Sweat is labeled as an Oatmeal Cream Stout