We are each our own Grand Pubah. And for me, the bar is pretty darn high.
As in, 9 out of 10 beers I try from new "craft" micro and nano breweries are either "meh" and completely unremarkable, or poorly made and I wouldn't take home if it were free.
Most "craft" beer these days is mediocre at best. Mark my words - in five years, at least half of the breweries that have popped up in the last five years, will be out of business. Why? Because they make an unremarkable product in a saturated market.
“We are each our own Grand Pubah” is a cop out. Seriously. Nobody cares what you think. Nobody cares what I think, either. Would 9 out of 10 craft beer drinkers find your beers good, or unremarkable? How would you know, unless you made your beers available to a wide range of consumers? As homebrewers, even if we’re generous when it comes to sharing our brews, we really don’t get feedback from a wide range of beer drinkers.
One would infer, from your comments, that you are happy with your approach to homebrewing, and are unimpressed by most commercial craft beer. Good for you. You’re one data point. Brew as you wish, in good health, for years to come. Don’t be upset, though, if your personal best practices aren’t met with wide approval from other homebrewers who are just as satisfied with their approach to brewing as you are with yours. If we’re each supposed to decide what’s best for us, to set our own standards, then it’s a matter of “live and let live” isn’t it? I think it is, but can’t help but notice when someone pays lip service to live and let live, but is compelled to add “...but
I’d never do it that way”.
In case anyone is wondering, I don’t take the Internet, in general, or special interest message boards, in particular, too seriously. That would include my own deposits which can be found scattered, randomly, around these premises.
