Devin
Well-Known Member
Then I guess I should be like all of the uber-pilsener lubbers and say something like, if you don't like basketball, then you haven't played "real" basketball. 
Then I guess I should be like all of the uber-pilsener lubbers and say something like, if you don't like basketball, then you haven't played "real" basketball.![]()
you sort of have to ease people into it. when craft beer was new on the scene, most every brewery made a simple amber hybrid type beer. this eased people into craft beer. sierra nevada was the most flavorful beer by a factor of about ten for a long long time.To put this into perspective, I have this story to tell. The Mrs. and I bought a storage building from a local builder and his crew was out a few days later setting it in position, leveling it and so forth. There was a crew of about 5 of them. They started talking about which beer is the best beer. The usual suspects where on the table for debate. Coors, Miller, Budweiser, Natural light, etc.. They asked me what I liked best. I told them that I didn't like any of those beers and that I mostly just drink what I make myself. This, of course, leads us to me bringing out 5 different examples of my best beers and a stack of Dixie cups. The overwhelming consensus between them was that my beer is ok, but I should go buy a six-pack of bud to be reminded of what "good" beer is.
That my friends, is a perfect example of the state of things. Six of us tasted fine beer, I was the only one that appreciated it. The rest prefer cheap swill.
There most be a cost, or big production reason. Are lagers easier to brew with consistant flavors?
No, lagers are much harder to get consistent. The big breweries have microbiologists and master brewers on staff- it's not cheap. The reason breweries make lagers is because they sell alot of them.
For the same reason McDonald's sells burgers that many gourmet food lovers won't touch- they make what sells. Big businesses make decisions on what consumers seem to want. While many people decry McDonald's cheeseburgers as ghastly, the vast majority eat them. We can be snobbish and say we don't like macro lagers- and that's fine. But the rest of the world doesn't agree with us all the time.
First, I am a huge lager fan. Learned to love them in Europe, and unfortunately, those beers don't transport well, so buying German or Euro beers here, especially lagers, don't represent the beers I had in Europe. Until recently, I haven't had great American lagers at all.
I think you have to sub-divide mass produced low flavor lagers, using rice and cheap adjuncts to minimize flavor / maximize alcohol cheaply, from craft lagers, they are completely different animals. I am drinking a Dunkel Doppelbock right now, and you would be an idiot to call it flavorless. Bocks, Maibocks, Marzens, Rauchbier, Swarzbier, Vienna Lager, a hoppy Pilsner. These are IMO some of the best beers in the world.
Lagers are more difficult to make, at least from the perspective of decoctions, bigger starters, slower temperature controlled fermentation, and temperature controlled ageing.
I had been brewing Ales, then had O'Dells Imperial Pilsner, blew me away. Prost Brewing in Denver is the hot new brewery, great beer. Started to collect the equipment to brew lagers myself, with fantastic results. And some may differ, but triple decoctions are awesome fun. I will admit, waiting months for a beer is hard, but it is important to build a pipeline.
I am not anti-Ales. Love good, malty DIPAs, brewing a Bourbon Barrel Quad Saturday, and I literally dream of Trappist style beers. I love fruity ale yeasts. I have six hop vines not to put 2 oz. into a lager but to make awesome ales. The US Craft Beer industry and homebrewers have done a fantastic job of making fantastic ales. In the end, I think lagers, made in a crafty way, will be the next thing. At least, I hope so.
So, let the mocking begin.
I was kinda curious about the difference in taste between the 2. I have a batch of Yoopers fizzy yellow beer lagering right now. It in its second week now. My lhbs guy says I wont be able to tell the difference.
Another thought... I don't know if this was mentioned - skimmed and did not see it. Large american breweries use a lot of adjuncts like corn and rice, etc. which are cheaper. Do you "need" a lager yeast/process to make better beer with adjuncts? If you used similar grain bills with corn, rice, etc. and ale yeasts..... would you end up with something inferior (more "inferior" than BMC beers)? Maybe the lagering process allows for use of cheaper ingredients and is therefore a cost savings?
I would also like to add (if not already said). That Lagers take alot longer to make.
I have asked a few micro and nano brewers why they don't make more lagers. And they always say because of the slow turnaround.
actually, I never thought of it that way. I always ask myself "what does it say about lagers that they are the most popular beer with the masses?" in all forms of consumption (books, tv, movies, music, food) it's the bland, least challenging brands that do the best.
Drinkability.
I have never had a pilsner that I like.
So which one? I would like to hear from the community which beer I should run down and purchase from Bizmo or Wine and More that will change my mind.
I ask this not because I want to re-affirm my preconceived opinion, but because I want to shatter it.