These stories about ungrateful, ignorant friends and neighbors are gonna give me a brain aneurysm. I'll drink your beer, guys. 

Went to the in-laws house for an early 4th of July this weekend. I brought 2 bottles of my first ever batch to see if anyone would care to taste what I've been working on and bragging about. (in their defense, it was only bottled 10 days ago so it was undercarbed, and I made a LOT of stupid mistakes so it is riddled with off flavors, and likely going down the drain) I got a unanimous 'no, I don't want to get botulism', 'I hear that stuff'll make u go blind!' and 'I've seen you when you get off work before your shower, I'm not drinking anything that came out of YOUR bathtub'...I'm not sure if those were all subtle jabs at me questioning my intelligence and capabilities or if they were serious, but, I didn't question it and let them keep on drinking their Milwaukees Best.
I've been brewing for 3 weeks and feel like I've hit the trifecta of dumb questions lol![]()
Was basically called the son of an unmarried communist woman.
"... Here in America we drink the beer made by the best capitalist brewers anywhere, and you should be thankful for that. Why wouldn't you want to support breweries that employ hard-working, blue collar American workers, unless you're some kind of.." and it all went downhill from there.
I don't know what got into that guy that day or how he made that leap.
This might be the angriest this thread has made me, and in the four years I've followed it I've been plenty ticked off...
Being told i dont know what im doing and not to buy yeast, yeast starterz only, dont do things i dont know how to do....just told that by a home brew shop cashier today when asking a simple question. But sinve he didnt gear my question, he assumed then degraded me in front of the whole store.
Beer geek - Loves beer and the distinct style differences for what they are and the appropriateness they have for a given situation.
Beer snob - A puts other people down based on what others choose to drink.
Most of us here are NOT the latter.
Miller Lite is a good beer. Just like Wonder Bread. Both are very light, fluffy, cheap, and pretty plain as beer or bread goes.
I've been to enough weddings where people get totally trashed and stupid. Not a good idea...
Was basically called the son of an unmarried communist woman.
"... Here in America we drink the beer made by the best capitalist brewers anywhere, and you should be thankful for that. Why wouldn't you want to support breweries that employ hard-working, blue collar American workers, unless you're some kind of.." and it all went downhill from there.
I don't know what got into that guy that day or how he made that leap.
How I tend to put it:
A beer geek cares about what he/she drinks.
A beer snob cares about what you drink.
How I tend to put it:
A beer geek cares about what he/she drinks.
A beer snob cares about what you drink.
Most snobs would fail in blind taste tests. Just like wine "experts" do.
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/jun/23/wine-tasting-junk-science-analysis
Exactly, my homebrew club did this with 15 BMC drinkers. (Bud, Miller, Coors)
We let them drink a beer each before we started. They had them do a blind testing with BMC and three others.
Only 1 of 15 got it right and I think he had lucky guess. All they had to pick a beer and identify it out of 6, two-ounce samples.
was at a brewery recently and the guy behind me asked the bartender if they had anything that tasted like budlight..smh"Do you brew anything that tastes like Bud Light?"
Not following what part is illegal... brewing is legal.
In the US, homebrewing is legal only for personal/family consumption.
Not quite. While some states may still have bad laws, generally it's completely legal for almost all non-commercial uses.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homebrewing#Legality
Um. As an attorney, I strongly recommend against relying on wikipedia for legal advice. That article discusses state laws (as you do yourself above) while completely ignoring federal law (as you also do above). Check the federal law - which is valid in ALL states. Personal/family consumption only.
To be fair, you did serve them 6 samples of the same beer, from cans with different manufacturers![]()
Um. As an attorney, I strongly recommend against relying on wikipedia for legal advice. That article discusses state laws (as you do yourself above) while completely ignoring federal law (as you also do above). Check the federal law - which is valid in ALL states. Personal/family consumption only.
Um. As an attorney, I strongly recommend against relying on wikipedia for legal advice. That article discusses state laws (as you do yourself above) while completely ignoring federal law (as you also do above). Check the federal law - which is valid in ALL states. Personal/family consumption only.
26 U.S. Code § 5053 - Exemptions
(e) Beer for personal or family use
Subject to regulation prescribed by the Secretary, any adult may, without payment of tax, produce beer for personal or family use and not for sale.
...
§ 25.205 Production.
(a) Any adult may produce beer, without payment of tax, for personal or family use and not for sale. An adult is any individual who is 18 years of age or older. If the locality in which the household is located requires a greater minimum age for the sale of beer to individuals, the adult shall be that age before commencing the production of beer. This exemption does not authorize the production of beer for use contrary to State or local law.
(b) The production of beer per household, without payment of tax, for personal or family use may not exceed:
(1) 200 gallons per calendar year if there are two or more adults residing in the household, or
(2) 100 gallons per calendar year if there is only one adult residing in the household.
(c) Partnerships except as provided in § 25.207, corporations or associations may not produce beer, without payment of tax, for personal or family use.
(Sec. 201, Pub. L. 85-859, 72 Stat. 1334, as amended ( 26 U.S.C. 5053))
Adults who produce beer at a BOP may remove their beer for personal or family use, including use in organized affairs, exhibitions, or competitions (such as homemaker's contests or tastings);
The Basics of Liquor Liability Insurance
Most states have some variation of "dram shop laws," which allow for the recovery of damages from the establishment responsible for serving the intoxicated person who harmed a third party. For instance, if an intoxicated patron starts a fight in your client's bar, the victim could sue your client for their injuries and property damage.
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Most snobs would fail in blind taste tests. Just like wine "experts" do.
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/jun/23/wine-tasting-junk-science-analysis
Dram Insurance...
Everyone has a different palate.
As I posted in another thread, I spent last weekend in Napa and Sonoma with my girlfriend.
There really wasn't all that strong of a correlation between price and whether we liked it.
So I just started brewing and I told a co worker about it. His reaction was the following: "Oh, that's awesome! You'll have to let me know how that goes. You think you could make something that tastes like Miller Lite?"
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Dram Insurance...
That's interesting and makes sense to me why I'm required to provide a licensed bartender to serve any booze at the venues we've looked at for my impending wedding.
In fact, the venue we went with provides the staff and serves from their own bar. Which would make me think that we would no longer be liable since, we're not the ones serving the booze. We just provide homebrew to the bar and pay the venue to serve it to our guests. I'm sure they have insurance on that since they insist on being in charge. Not to mention they clearly state they will cut off your guests right quick if they're getting stumbly bumbly.![]()