In case people missed it, yes it was a bummer that my beer disappeared. I also mentioned that I was thrilled that it was so well received. On the balance I took it as a compliment.
For the record, I did say to them that I had wanted to keep some to age for a bit prior to anyone having any, and also pointed them towards some mead that I had brewed and towards a case of Labatt Blue which was available as well.
I should point out that I am more than happy to share my creations with the people I care about, and this is one of the things I like most about home brewing. I would NEVER dream of offering someone some home brew then insisting they pay for what they took. NEVER EVER!
The thing that got to me was that when the fridge was empty, people took it upon themselves to go into the brew room and re-stock for themselves, while I was in the kitchen with my wife cooking xmas dinner. I had no idea this was going on until I went to have a pint the day after boxing day and there was no beer to be had. Up until then, I had no idea that anyone had been in my brew room helping themselves.
I'm not pissed that they drank it all. I'm more pissed that they did so without asking and knowing that I had wanted to save some. If I was at someone's house and noticed that there were only 6 home-brews left out of an original 40, while a full case of commercial beer sat uncracked in the fridge, I would leave the home-brews alone. It just struck me as a bit of a ****** move to drink them all in such a sneaky way.
This was not an isolated incident and I should have known better. These are the same in-laws that cleaned me out of craft brew at thanksgiving (which is why the case of labatt's was present).
There, now that you all know the whole story, is it appropriate to suggest that they contribute something to keep the pipeline from running dry, or should I just cut off their supply of good booze and drink mine in front of them?