• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Random Beer Thoughts

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
2csxmUs.jpg

giphy.gif
 
JBPortland is the Hill Farmstead logo in reference to this post? Or was it just a coincidence? And is the other label Cigar City? Is there any way you could make it a BCBCS?

Nah not really about any post, it was the only logo I figured I could do with a handful of pixels in the 5 minutes I snuck to do this at my desk. But yes the other one was Cigar City, good eye.
 
tired hands taking a page out of hotd's handbook. i'm looking forward to hop hands from the egg.


I though Adam from the Stone had a distinct mineral-ey quality that was not present in regular Adam. I would say that I prefer regular Adam, but I've only had one bottle of AftS.

Could just be HotD batch variation. ;)
 
I though Adam from the Stone had a distinct mineral-ey quality that was not present in regular Adam. I would say that I prefer regular Adam, but I've only had one bottle of AftS.

Could just be HotD batch variation. ;)
i'll be trying one next month, maybe it will be different then? who knows.. i'm just stoked to have a hotd beer that is carbed :eek:
 
Not to get into a semantics argument, but if you are selling the beer out of your own doors without involving origlio/Bella/shangys isn't that as direct to consumer it gets?

At least for beer?
Ultimately it comes down to what you mean by directly to consumer. If you consider not going through distribution and selling your kegs to bars and your bottles and cans at the brewery then yes they are direct to consumer. However I do not in the purest sense consider them direct to consumer because the consumer still needs to go to them-either the brew pubs directly or the bars and restaurants selling their kegs. What Inoculum is doing I would consider direct to consumer because the consumer can order it from their home and the beer will be essentially brought to them-directly from the brewery to the consumer. Sure it is a semantics argument but I think just because TH cut out the middle man distributors they are not direct to consumer in the purest sense while Inoculum is.
 
Ultimately it comes down to what you mean by directly to consumer. If you consider not going through distribution and selling your kegs to bars and your bottles and cans at the brewery then yes they are direct to consumer. However I do not in the purest sense consider them direct to consumer because the consumer still needs to go to them-either the brew pubs directly or the bars and restaurants selling their kegs. What Inoculum is doing I would consider direct to consumer because the consumer can order it from their home and the beer will be essentially brought to them-directly from the brewery to the consumer. Sure it is a semantics argument but I think just because TH cut out the middle man distributors they are not direct to consumer in the purest sense while Inoculum is.
Would you say Inoculum is redefining what direct to consumer can be?
 
Back
Top