And I hope I've been clear that's good!I like the beer I like.
I know of kvass, but it's one of the smallish number of beer styles I haven't tried. And the big beer companies are just that kind of ... crap. Fortunately, there are breweries that are more locally owned (even if not necessarily owned local to where I am, if I'm being clear) and I'll drink their products.I went to Russia back in 2005, and one thing that stood out was a tour of Razin Brewery’s facility in Moscow. When we arrived, they were still giddy about being bought out by Heineken. So part of our tour included a tasting in a board room. Each of us got a whole bottle of each of their 14 products, including kvass (a nearly alcohol free beer made from raisin bread and that tastes a lot like Dr. Pepper).
This was around 10:30AM.
I liked most of what I had, so when I got back to the USA, I started looking for Razin products. I found other Russian beers, but not theirs.
So I went online to see what happened. Heineken hadn’t bought Razin to broaden its distribution, or even to relabel their beers as Heineken products. They did it to get rapid access to the markets Razin was in, and their distribution network in those regions. The company itself got shuttered; its recipes shelved.
I have been in home tiki bar groups on Facebook where the moderators would kick people out of the group if the photos of their home tiki bars weren't sufficiently tiki enough for their tastes.
That said, the hot sauce community seems pretty chill, not shaming people for asking basic questions or being excited about pretty ordinary store-bought hot sauces they've just discovered, even if the hardcore folks are growing their own peppers and bottling their own sauces.
My main example is the Patrick O'Brien Appreciation Society on FB. Almost always scrupulously friendly, welcoming, and gentlemanly. Colloquially referred to as the gunroom, people treat each other as fellow officers on a small ship, and habitually use endearing language from the books (referring to each other as "shipmates", congratulating people with Stephen's "I give you joy", etc.). Gordon Laco, the chief technical consultant on the movie, is an active member, and a couple of cast members have popped in occasionally as well. Tons of historical and sailing expertise on display in the group, but the friendliness is the key feature.I am genuinely happy there's a community that proves me wrong, and I sincerely hope it continues to do so.
Would this then not bring up an important distinction between appropriate and inappropriate assumptions?When learning physics, it is common to have problems where you make various simplifying assumptions about the thing you're trying to calculate, such as approximating whatever you're trying to calculate as a point rather than whatever its actual shape and volume is, or ignoring air resistance/drag when calculating how quickly something falls. This is done so you can focus on whatever the problem is trying to teach, and often you will get fairly close to what the real-world solution would be.
White-rooming is kind of like that. You abstract away all the circumstances to get to the core of the issue. That is often practical, particularly when comparing two things. For example, circle of death hits all creatures within a 60-foot radius sphere, while fireball has a 20-foot radius instead. So as a first order of approximation, circle of death should hit about 9 times as many targets as fireball (3 times the radius, and square that for an area – we're ignoring height for the moment). That's the white-room comparison. But in an actual situation, it's pretty rare to be facing enemies that are so numerous and spread out that you get full benefit from the larger AOE. You might hit an extra target or two, but almost certainly not nine times as many. And in addition, the larger AOE can be a liability because it's hard to hit many enemies without hitting friends as well. And that's the kind of analysis that you generally don't get from white-rooming something.
then you didn't really make a fool of yourself, it's only foolish if you refuse to learn.Well, I made a fool of myself...but learn something in the process.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.