Pics please!!!![]()
No one wants to see my old kegs. Trust me.
Pics please!!!![]()
What's with people?
I find in my area, people are genuinely intrigued when they find out I am a homebrewer. I also think it has a lot to do with presentation... if you are wearing a stained wife beater and drinking a 40 oz of Mickeys and note that you brew your own beer, people will have a different impression than a guy in a sport coat passionately describing their hobby and enthusiasm about beer.
September 6, 2007 - "Marketing" Homebrews
Creative consultants Bob Corscadden and James Gardner of jimbob give us tips on "selling" the idea of drinking homebrew and other good beers in this day of mass-marketed big-boy beers.
Listen
...I just accept the fact that some people are dicks.
And the problem is.............
JK. I have a sister-in-law who thinks I'm an alcoholic because I drink a beer at every family outing. Little does she know that she's the reason why.
No one wants to see my old kegs. Trust me.
Deus is $29, Utiopias ~$100. There's 2.
How many 1000's of wines can you buy in that price range?
BTW: I said pretentious. I don't consider either of them pretentious.
A few things as I see it:
In a few weeks, youll be able to walk into virtually any retail store and see the beer in a box kits for the Christmas season. In a few months, Christmas wrappings will be waiting at the curbside while hundreds of thousands of new brewers are boiling away their new home made beer. The sheer availability of homebrew kits compared to wine kits lends itself to a sh!tload more beginner homebrew being brewed in neighborhoods and shared with friends and family.
There is a vast difference between beer that comes out of a Mr. Beer kit from a first time brewer and an all grain batch that has just been brewed by someone who has 30+ batches under their belt. In the last three decades (since Homebrewing was re-legalized back in 1978), most Homebrewing has been done in the form of kits and liquid extract and a vast portion was brewed by new brewers who dabbled in the hobby, shared their product, then got out of the hobby.
I consider my beer servable to any audience but it wasnt always that way.
Certainly high quality homebrew has been the exception rather than the rule the last 30 years.
Plus, there is just a different public perception between beer drinkers and wine drinkers. (Wrong though it may be)
Good point... I am not complaining though, I am happy with the small mark-up on beer.
You know, if you attached some quick disconnects to them then added say maybe 30-40 psi I bet those girls would just perk right on up there...No one wants to see my old kegs. Trust me.
people are stupid... generally.
Yes, we do.
Loop
Plus, there is just a different public perception between beer drinkers and wine drinkers. (Wrong though it may be)
Seriously though, I don't think that I have ever run into anyone that looks down on me for brewing, but I think that part of it has to do with the passion that I show about beer in general. I am not some college kid running around screaming "BEER!!! WHOO HOOO!!!". I show them a knowledge of the history, the science, and the art of brewing.
Living in a dry country, surrounded by dry counties, home brewing generally doesn't come up for discussion in most social circles. I remember when I bought my house our new neighbors where talking about how it was so wrong that the previous owners had converted the garage into a game room with a bar while I just stood there thinking that's half the reason I bought the house.
Sorry for you. While the others here are brewing and sharing right out in the open, you have to hide yourself and pretend you are a 1920's ridgerunner, hooch brewing, law-breaker.
I wonder how you are going to find others who want to drink your beer.