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What beer would you describe as the beer that 'awakened' you...?

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For me it was Sierra Nevada Pale Ale. With my first sip my taste buds went WOW. It wasn't long before I was brewing my own.
 
It was a progression for me, very slowly realizing that beer could be an outright explosion of great flavor.

Black Forest Lager (microbrew in New Orleans, mid 90's)
IPAII (microbrew in San Diego a couple years ago)
Boundary Bay IPA in Seattle this year -- this made me search out the best IPAs at the local stores, then the price tags got me into home brewing.
 
lol passedpawn!!

Ive gotta say hobgoblin!! Then again I'll most likely be awaked again in my journeys...
 
My awakening came courtesy of an Oatmeal Porter made by Highland Brewing, which is headquartered in Asheville, N.C. I spent three years going to school there, and before that I had never really had "craft-brewed" beer. I had tried some better beers than the typical BMC offerings, like Dos Equis and Newcastle, but the Oatmeal Porter was the first porter I tried, and the first beer to really impress me. Later, while writing for the school paper, I was asked to write an article on Asheville's microbrewery scene. I hopped aboard the Brews Cruise, which shuttled drinkers to three of the city's microbreweries for samples.

Highland was one of the stops, and I once again had the Oatmeal Porter and several other great beers. I still believe Highland makes some really great beers.

It's funny -- when I first got to Asheville, my friends and I stopped into a bar to have some local brews. We had highly-hopped Asheville Pizza's Shiva IPA. I was, quite frankly, disgusted. I thought it was one of the worst beers I had ever had, and I couldn't believe anyone would like this beer that the waitress said was one of the city's most loved.

Now I'm actually starting to appreciate IPAs, though I'm still more partial to the stouts and porters. I've come a long way in appreciating beer, but I've got an even longer way to go.
 
mine was fat tire, first had it around 2001-2002ish (turned 21 in 2001).. starting trying more micros from there.. still drank bud light frequently up until about 3-4 years ago, no strictly micros. Started homebrewing this year.. on batch 5!
 
Well I started off in high school drinking schwag beer and then started to drink newcastle and heine and red stripe. and then when I became a much older high schooler my friends and I would love to drink Sammy Smiths Taddy Porter. But the beer that made me start to drink other beers and go and look for good brew was Saranac Caramel Porter. I thought whoa!! This is beer? You are damn right it is!!!!
 
that would be pilsner uriquell for me . about 7 years ago the wife &i went on a 10 day cruise in the Bahamas that is all i drank { ran up a huge bar tab} from then on i started looking at beer in a new way
 
Theakston's Old Peculier was the first beer that got me to really understand that beer could taste better than yellow water. I'm fermenting an "Old Pecilierish" clone right now.
 
Several years ago while vacationing in Leavenworth, WA. we ate lunch at the Leavenworth Brewery. First time I had ever tasted beer that was so fresh and not mass produced lager. Unfortunatly they sold out and are no longer in the town. Another brewery bought them out and some of the beers are still available locally. They probably are not as good as others I have had since, but I can still remember how I didn't really drink beer before that day.
 
My brother-in-law worked at Anderson's through college and law school. He worked in the specialty foods / wine / beer department.
I occasionally took trips there to get some cheap beer, MGD...crap like that.
For whatever reason I decided I wanted to try a stout, so I bought a pack of Samuel Smith Oatmeal Stout. My wife was shocked, I'm a pretty cheap guy when it comes to spending money on myself for anything.

I loved it! The flavor was not like anything I had tasted in a beer to that point. I was amazed!
Since I don't drink heavy quantities of alcohol at a sitting, I've been drinking premium beers ever since.
 
The first beer that I drank that wasn't standard store-bought stuff was a Weihenstephaner Hefe and Original. Ever since I had those, I've always went for micro's. I only buy macro's for parties or something of the like. But the two beers that surprised me by far were Southern Tiers Imperial Pumpking and Buffalo Bills Blueberry Oatmeal Stout. Totally didn't expect what was about to make love to my pallet and taste buds.
 
In 1992 I turned 21.

A friend had transfers to San Fransisco State, and lived near the Haight-Ashbury area, and one day while visiting him we walked into this bar... actually a beer house....

I sometimes still wonder if it's still there...


It was called Toranados ( sp )

I tried a really bitter beer called Red Tail Ale.... the rest in history...

I also, way back then, fell in love Samual Smiths Oatmeal Stout...,, but the bitter beers seems to call to me a strange way...



Holy Cow... Google is an amazing thing... http://www.toronado.com/
 
An IPA whose name I no longer remember that they were serving samples of at Whole Foods.

Before that I pretty much drank wine and hard liquor, and SABL if beer was the only thing available.
 
Berghoff Dark-1993 in Madison, WI. I was a freshman and up unitl then had only had BMC. Not the best beer but a lot more flavor than I was used to then. Started brewing the next year.
 
I've never been a yellow fizzy beer drinker.

I think it was the world of brewing that opened things up a little more for me rather than commercial beers.
 
St. Pauli Girl was the first non-BMC beer I had and changed my mind about what beer had to taste like. It's not one of my favorite beers today but it was a hell of a lot better than Old Milwaukee's Best.
 
i went to Colorado for 4-5 weeks when i was 19 to mess around. fell in love with fat tire and O'dell's easy street wheat. started brewing a few years later because i wanted fat tire all the time and couldn't get it on the east coast. 11 years later and i still haven't perfected it, though i am close.
 
I was never a drinker. Not until I was about 25. At that point I tried a Killian's and wondered why I had not been drinking all those years. I have since moved on to other styles, but I still like Killian's, even though it is technically a lager and not an Irish Red Ale. (See, I know that now). I was given a Mr. Beer kit for Christmas one year. It came out really bad, so I went to a local HBS to see if I could make it any better. The rest is history, I guess.
 
McEwan's Scottish Ale on tap at a local Albany, NY restaurant.

(F*ck Henniken and their f*cking stupid f*cking not-importing-into-the-USA-anymore f*cking policy... f*ckers.)


Other top beers that came later on:
Sinebrychoff Porter
Kasteelbier Brune-Bruin (Bruin-Brune? Whatever's 11 percent and tasty, I think it's their triple)
Baltika Porter #6
Brooklyn's Black (Double?) Chocolate Stout

Before the McEwans, the only beer I'd ever tasted was BMC (including crap like rolling rock) or IPAs that were bitter and horrible. Then I found the magical world of stouts, porters, and belgian strong ales.
 
Although it is no longer my favorite beer (somewhere between 11 and 15, probably), Rogue Dead Guy Ale was a beer that completely turned upside-down my definition of "beer." I thought Sam Adams was pretty much the best beer there was until that point. All of a sudden, I realized there was stuff out there will complexity and flavors that I'd never considered possible.

Then I had a second awakening several years later when I had an evening of Belgian beer with a buddy. Duvel, Orval, and Chimay Blue, all in one night. It was a revelation.
 
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