You get Newky Brown over there? Cool! I don't particularly like it myself, but I'm glad to hear something familiar.Bass Puppet said:my absolute favorite is Newcastle Brown Ale.
You get Newky Brown over there? Cool! I don't particularly like it myself, but I'm glad to hear something familiar.Bass Puppet said:my absolute favorite is Newcastle Brown Ale.
You know real Guinness (as in "from Ireland", two Ns, by the way) totally different to the Guinness anywhere else, right? I can't stand the stuff myself, but it's quite popular on the Emerald Isle.Iuz said:I am surprised at all the votes for Guiness, not that it isn't the best - it is - but because most people I know can't believe I drink it.![]()
Morrus, if you think Coors is the best the US has to offer, think again. I can't say I've got a lot of experience with European beers, but I drank pretty well on my honeymoon in Norway and Denmark, and tried plenty of different beers there, and none of them held a candle to the good microbrews you can get these days in the states.Morrus said:Christ - there are Americans answering this thread. I despair for humanity!
Guys, however good you think it is - go abroad. Anywhere. Trust me!![]()
Pielorinho said:...the US has undergone a dramatic shift in the beers available in the past decade, and what was once a wasteland is now a thriving experimental garden.
Actually the US has a brewing history that as diverse & robust as any two members of the EU combined can claim. The problem (as is far too often the case in this country) has been economy of scale. Large national breweries producing a product who's primary attributes are good shelf life, stability in transport and bland taste that appeals to the lowest common denominator.But partly that's because the US has undergone a dramatic shift in the beers available in the past decade, and what was once a wasteland is now a thriving experimental garden.
Are you sure? I was under the impression that in the eighties, alcohol tax laws changed in the states that made it plausible for small local breweries to produce product, and that those changes were in part responsible for the re-emergence of microbreweries.Krieg said:Small local American breweries have always produced brews comparable (and often times superior) to the best the rest of the world has to offer.
I rest my case. I really, really do....Pielorinho said:Beer snobs were drinking ...Heineken.
MY favorite beer is actually used for Shampoo!Morrus said:I rest my case. I really, really do....
Now don't get me started on cars too, or this could go on for ever!![]()
Morrus said:You know real Guinness (as in "from Ireland", two Ns, by the way) totally different to the Guinness anywhere else, right? I can't stand the stuff myself, but it's quite popular on the Emerald Isle.