hunter_le five
Sheriff Underscore
Speaking of TFD:

And ... ? Are you going to share?I'm guessing it's a ton of Citra/Simcoe/Centennial?
Hey hey hey!!
We love our roaches AND our trees.
Lol
we ran into this little guy last time we were in Myrtle Beach.
The BigHair's first encounter with one; she was not thrilled
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BMC beer producers have done a remarkably good job of redefining "good beer" as the product they can mass-produce cheaply.
My father, a WW2 vet, told me that beer in the U.S.A. began to take on the light and bland character it has today as a result of WW2. According to him, after WW2 a large number of their customers didn't return from the war. The BMC breweries wanted to get women buying and consuming more beer. They found that by making it lighter and less flavorful they could have more success marketing to women.
This may not be true at all. My father had a way of connecting the wrong dots and coming up with his own ideas, but that is what he told me.
However it occurred, it is true that American style lager is bland and boring. I'm glad to see the dark-ages of beer in the U.S.A coming to a close with the explosion of craft brewing in both micro-breweries and peoples homes.
I sometimes wonder what would happen if suddenly it became a mega-trend for everyone to start home brewing? Would politicians start taxing it? Would the cost of base malt skyrocket? Would hops become so scarce that making an IPA be considered wasteful? Would laws suddenly become more restrictive on what you can brew? -shudder
Is this the best time in the history of our lives to be home brewing and we don't even realized it?
Hmm...that ad seems to reveal their fear of the fact that the market share is being taken more and more by craft breweries. And the ad is pretty insulting to their own product.
Are you high? Some pretty deep philosophical Homebrewing questions.
Yesterday for Super Bowl, I opened an amber ale that was my first brew, about a year ago. Buddy's wife, bud/Busch light drinker, wants to give it a try. I tell her she will not like it and will make the bad beer face she has made before when she took a sip of others. I tell her to take a good chug and taste the flavor. She takes a sip, makes said face and runs to the chili on the stove to get rid of the taste. Goes on to say,"if I had to drink that beer, I would quit drinking beer!" I tried to explain flavor profiles of different beers, but she just got back into her bud light. She did like my spiced apple cider though.
Please tell us you will never again give that _____ the opportunity to be so rude and disrespectful to one of our own.
Sorry if this was an overreaction.
Are you high? Some pretty deep philosophical Homebrewing questions.
Grain rationing during the war also led to brewing lighter-bodied beers, and using adjuncts that were cheaper and more prevalent.
So, thanks a lot, Hitler. Light beer was your fault.
My father, a WW2 vet, told me that beer in the U.S.A. began to take on the light and bland character it has today as a result of WW2. According to him, after WW2 a large number of their customers didn't return from the war. The BMC breweries wanted to get women buying and consuming more beer. They found that by making it lighter and less flavorful they could have more success marketing to women.
This may not be true at all. My father had a way of connecting the wrong dots and coming up with his own ideas, but that is what he told me.
Please tell us you will never again give that _____ the opportunity to be so rude and disrespectful to one of our own.
Sorry if this was an overreaction.
A guy at work just told me Guinness extra stout tastes like a chunk of wood soaked in a little blood with sugar poured on top
A guy at work just told me Guinness extra stout tastes like a chunk of wood soaked in a little blood with sugar poured on top