Completely different from the stuff in Ireland and again from the stuff I used to drink in Scotland. The American version is way too watery. You should almost be able to chew it down in big gulps!
Abita. Their Brown/Porter is okay for being relatively inexpensive, but I tried the amber one day, and I promptly returned the entire sixer. Since then, I'll have no part in any of their others, save for the Brown.
Anything by Becks. It all tastes skunky and old.
Kingfisher et al. Trash lagers, no better than BMC, but sold at Indian restaurants at "premium" prices.
Kirin, Sopporo, etc. See above. Not too different from BMC, but sold by various Asian restaurants like it's Liquid Gold.
STELLA. STELLA. STELLA. God help me, this crap is EVERYWHERE. It's not a "bad" beer, but it's not really much better than BMC either. Yet, everywhere I go, they've got it on tap and are charging premium prices for it. Are you kidding me? And to make matters worse, all the doofuses who normally drink BMC or Cali Chard order Stella and they think they're drinking some exotic potion. Their self-satisfaction smells like turds.
Redhook ESB. Again, pushed by many places as premium, but it's not. The winterhook is okay.
Magic Bullsh*t Hat. There's a huge following, but don't ask me why. All their beers taste watered down, like they want to be craft brewery, but can't bring themselves to risk alienating the BMC crowd. Ugh.
Hoegaarden. A good wit, but bland in comparison to real-deal belgian wit done by artisan producers and not an international conglomerate.
Guinness. Nuff said. Oh, it's dark, so it must be mysterious and exotic. Pfft.
Killians. Tastes like Goldfish crackers. Do they salt their brew?
Rolling Cock. The most skunked beer of all the skunky beers. I'll drink a gallon of bud light before I put my lips to a Rolling Rock. And the nerve to actually charge MORE for this tripe? Nas-tay.
I could go on, but I have a meeting in 5 mins.
For example, the Palo Santo that DFH just released was awesome. It just is. Whether or not you personally like something has no affect on whether or not it is actually good (or well done). That is like the garbage grade-school teachers spew to kids that poetry is about whatever you think it is about.... WRONG! It is about what the poet was writing about. Same with beer, just because you don't "get" a beer, doesn't mean it is overpriced.
DFH pushes the brewing boundaries. It is what they do, and they are very good at it. I don't like all their beers either, but they are all "good".
If you don't like experimenting with beer, don't buy new ones
I can't figure out how people even finish a Sam Adams Boston Lager. Their Hefe and Obtoberfest are two of the only drinkable beers I've had from them, and I bought a sampler once and tried their standards. I still have to try their Winter and Spring seasonals though.
Samuel Smith is so friggin expensive, $9 for 4 bottles?! But I can't call them overpriced, just out of my league most days.
Redhook's ESB is a bit bland to be considered a microbrew bitter thus making it overpriced to me. I saw a clone kit of it at my LHBS and thought "why?"
But what kills me is what people will pay for some beers at bars. I'm drinking a pint of Yuengling for 2 or 3 bucks, and someone comes in and pays the same 3 bucks for a Coors Light in a bottle. That's overpriced. Or even the guy paying 3 bucks for Bud Lights. Geez, after drinking 3 you just paid for a 12-pack buddy.
Or when I was with a buddy and he paid 5 bucks for a girl to pour a 16 oz can of Guinness into a glass for him.
Other than some of the ones mentioned that I do agree with, I would have to add anything from Blue moon, Post Road and a re-post of Magic Hat. I wanted to like the Magic hat, and kept trying to get into it, but it was a craft beer, but dialed way back IMHO.
I have to stick up for Guinness, Victory (how can you not like hop devil???) and Sam Adams. All three are on my order list at a bar when the selection of good beer is limited.
Your a crackhead if you think guinness tastes anything like that AB would make. EVER!
i dont drink much beer but i would say that guiness is definatly over priced and most american guiness is just budwiser with food coloring... I had a cream stout a month back or so which was horrid, and cost major... oh wait that was my friends home brew hich he made with a total home bre kit which cost 200 bucks (three extracts, two buckets, 0 12oz bottles, racking cane, bottling buckett, and yeast) and it was ****e beer... i dont think that counts... had some Dogfish once, didnt pay for it though... i hate to say this but i have to... i love Woodchucks (draft cider, i know its not beer but its a regualr for me) and it tends to be over priced.... Miller highlife.... aslo over piced for stuff that doesnt evenrate as beer
Cheers
BrewinJack said:i dont drink much beer but i would say
i dont drink much beer but
Cheers
Sigh. Here we are again with the Guinness. Having recently had Guinness on tap at the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin, it's not even a little bit different from the Guinness you get on tap here in the States. This is probably one of the most perpetuated beer myths I know. It's either that or that Guinness is supposed to taste 'thick'.
In my opinion, perception is the biggest part of the price structure of most things. Brewers have learned all the nasty ploys of the wine producers. If it's expensive, it must be good. Yeah, right!![]()
Just to clarify, there is two different types of Guinness. Guinness draught and Guinness extra stout. The draught isn't that good, in my opinion. This may be what he was referring too. The extra stout which i believe is the original recipe from Ireland is the good stuff. That should clear that up.