iijakii
Well-Known Member
I love sours, but there's only so much $12 beer I'm willing to buy.
whos putting bananas in their soup? I mean if you think about it, IPAs have the most vegetative matter going into them. IMO, thats the closest beer to soup...
Never had a banana/tapioca soup?
I wish my city would join in this saison craze.
Right now we are stuck on the "pale/ipa/brown" craze with the occasional really bad stout.
The "bourbon barrel aged" craze is still alive and well, unfortunately. That's the worst of the worst.
The "bourbon barrel aged" craze is still alive and well, unfortunately. That's the worst of the worst.
You dont like $15 beers that all taste the same?
The beauty of being a homebrewer: you create whatever craze you want![]()
That and the fact that people will take days off of work to try and acquire said beers...and wait outside, in line with their infants in sub-32F temperatures. And talk about beer the entire time while in line.
And then immediately "cellar" said beer(s).
That and the fact that people will take days off of work to try and acquire said beers...and wait outside, in line with their infants in sub-32F temperatures. And talk about beer the entire time while in line.
And then immediately "cellar" said beer(s).
Saisons are gross. Along with most belgians and wheat beers. Pepper, banana, clove? WTF. This isn't soup, get out of my beer.
have you ever tried St. Feuillien Saison?
I totally disagree I believe most if not all great breweries focus on a particular style, master it, then move on to something different of course brewing other beer while doing this. I don't mind saison at all I had some pretty phenomenal ones while at the festival. What I don't like is the stigma associated with the style. That very present up nosed turn to people who do not like or understand the beer. It was some what amusing to see all the tart faces walking about. Faces that looked as if they just sucked on a lemon. There were many styles of beer not represented at all. Which is why I made the post in the first place. If I had walked in to the festival and all arrays of beer were represented and some great farmhouse and saisons were represented also, like Jester King for instance then there would have been no observation made. It's hard to get your average beer drinker into craft when the trendy industry acts as if it's to good for the average beer drinker.
Just got back from Shelton bros. craft festival in St Petersburg poured my self a double simcoe clone and began to wonder what I had just taken part of. Honestly I didn't imagine the saison craze had gotten this intense. Every brewery represented it seems had at least one saison barrel aged in something, if not two, if not all of there samples they offered. Of course I'm exaggerating a tad but still it's bewildering to think that the craft industry has become such a fad oriented business.
Next craft beer style craze: American Light Lager
You heard it here first.
Saisons are gross. Along with most belgians and wheat beers. Pepper, banana, clove? WTF. This isn't soup, get out of my beer.
There are no 'crazes' in Ontario. The LCBO stocks within it's shelf space (few) and you can get the odd item direct from a local brewery. Almost all non-macro beers are pale/light/golden/lager something, maybe amber... The odd stout, wheat, belgian, a few IPA's and saisons only in summer, basically. Pretty much it. Not really sure if Canadian micros are that boring or afraid to put out a product that may not sell well.