mcspanner
Well-Known Member
Economics derail pt. 3 in 5....4....3....
Lol, its a good thing I drink when I read this thread!
Ok, 'funny thing' contribution -
Talking with a female co-worker today describing the hops I grow. I mention 'Chinook'.
"Oh, those must be Canadian, right?"
???....sigh.
"No, I think they call those 'Canucks'...."
No, no, no... Chinook hops are the ones that give the beer a light fishy flavour and aroma.Maybe instead of Canadian she must have been trying to ask if they were a helicopter? Or a breed of hops that only grows when the wind's blowing a certain way?
No, no, no... Chinook hops are the ones that give the beer a light fishy flavour and aroma.
It's been my experience that ALL hops give you a HERE'S HOPS IN YOUR FACE flavour.
You have got to cellar it
I don't get it.
No,no,no. Grind them into a powder then snort a line. That's real hop aroma & flavor.
I think I might have your first customer:
What the hell is the matter with that guy?
I was at a bar yesterday and the lady asked the waitress if she had Crispin. She said no, but what is it like so I can make a suggestion. The lady said it is like blue moonand her friend said no it is more like white wine. After the waitress suggested a hoegarrden (sp? ) she said no. I was right next to them and I mentioned that Crispin is a hard cider. The waitress listed their ciders and she ordered a Bud light.
I was at a bar yesterday and the lady asked the waitress if she had Crispin. She said no, but what is it like so I can make a suggestion. The lady said it is like blue moonand her friend said no it is more like white wine. After the waitress suggested a hoegarrden (sp? ) she said no. I was right next to them and I mentioned that Crispin is a hard cider. The waitress listed their ciders and she ordered a Bud light.
OK for the next chapter of Home Brewing Without Failures (cutting edge brewing from 1965) he discusses his suspicion that French beer is made with leftover grape/crappy grape/grape skins/something grapey in general. Rather than doing any, you know, research to check this he decides to go ahead and check it by throwing grapes or grape juice concentrate into his wort.
This isn't quite as crazy as the rest of the book as some saisons have grape in them and I haven't had any but I could see the appeal. And he does tell people to use campden tablets.
His recipes:
1. Make a normal light ale or lager and throw in a pint of grape juice concentrate into a 4 gallon batch.
2. 1 lb light DME, 1 oz "hops", 1 lb sugar (of course, how could he not?), 2 lb of green grapes crushed and thrown into the bottom of the fermentor after being sterilized and one gallon water. I have no clue how much beer that would add up to but that sounds pretty potent and probably a bit less horrific than a lot of the other recipes in this book.
Next up: Cider Making.
only 8 days left before I make a 1 year anniversary video with another well aged BL!
I will watch that... twice even!
only 8 days left before I make a 1 year anniversary video with another well aged BL!
At an Irish Pub I go to.
only 8 days left before I make a 1 year anniversary video with another well aged BL!
Hosted my grandparents for most of the weekend. Grandfather only drinks light lagers. Here's some highlights:
*On tasting "Not Your Father's Root Beer"*
This is delicious, I'll need to pick up some of this before we head home. But I WON'T buy it cold, since we have a long drive and our cooler is full. Don't want it to skunk.
*On observing the 5.9% ABV*
Grandfather: That's pretty high.
Grandmother: How much is in beer?
Grandfather: You'll be lucky to get 4%. Most domestics are around that area.
Me: Yeah 5.9% is pretty high for a soda like this. What do you mean by "Domestic?"
Grandfather: You know, like Budweiser and Millers and Natty Lite, those are all around 4%. Unless you get a lager like Yuengling, but even Yuengling isn't this high.
Me: ...Yeah I guess that's right.
Grandfather: Domestics can't be more than 7% either.
Me: (only being able to take so much). I don't know about that. I can get a barleywine made in the US that's north of 10%
Grandfather: That's a wine though.
Me: It's technically a beer.
Grandfather: It sounds like a malt liquor if it's that high.
Me: ...alright.
Grandfather: Unless the stuff you're talking about is Canadian like Labatt Blue and stuff like that.
I love and respect the hell out of the guy but that whole conversation was painful.
Ohhhhhh I'm sure he thinks you sound stupid talking about certain stuff, too.