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ruffryder 09-16-2012 08:32 PM

Over the weekend we went to a german restaurant/pub and I drank some Spaten Optimator Bock. I got a Liter and I barely finished half. :| was strong! heh.

Look forward to trying some of the beers being brought to the reunion and some irish brews at the couples lunch. :hangloose:

http://www.tampabay.com/multimedia/a...er_236239c.jpg

Bèsame* 09-16-2012 09:33 PM

I like my beer with lemonade, yummy. Oh, and it's all about Shiner Bock right now :)

ruffryder 09-25-2012 08:51 PM

at the reunion chef shared some Boddingtons with me.. Yum!!

at the couples lunch I also found a new like, Shiner Bock. . and bonded with Chad over our love of it and Modelo !

Electrocell 09-25-2012 09:00 PM

Tried the orange shiner bock with Ciarin at the reunion it was pretty good.

Scuba 09-25-2012 09:13 PM

Definitely a fan of Shock Top (it's what I like to drink after a day of skiing) and will be trying the fall pumpkin flavor. Oktoberfest starts next weekend. There'll be a lot of micro-brewers and great beer, food and music.

Dance-with-me 09-25-2012 10:32 PM

I live in Dogfish Head territory - Midas Touch, Sah'Tea, any of their IPAs, or an aged Barleywine... mmmm mmmm mmmmmmmmmmmm.

ruffryder 09-28-2012 10:10 AM

What does beer say about your politics? Agree? heh.

ORLANDO -- cfnews13.com
Did you know your favorite beer could have an impact on your political views?

According to a new study published in the National Journal, if you drink Samuel Adams beer you are most likely a Republican.

Heineken drinkers, on the other hand, are more likely to be Democrats than any other beer drinkers.

Bud Light fans don't lean toward either party, the same for those who drink Miller High Life.

According to the study, Dos Equis drinkers are likely nonpartisan. It may come as a surprise because the face of the beer, known as the "Most interesting man in the world," hosted a fundraiser for President Obama.

weatherboi 09-28-2012 11:58 AM

Happy National Drink Beer Day!
 
http://eatocracy.cnn.com/2012/09/28/...y/?hpt=hp_bn11

Today is National Drink Beer Day, although if you’re an avid beer drinker, you participate in the spirit of NDBD most days of the year. For everyone else, this should be a day where you put down that glass of wine or fancy cocktail, and pick up an American craft beer.

The craft beer movement is out of control right now. New breweries are popping up all over the country, archaic state laws are beginning to change that benefit the consumer and brewing community, and sales figures continue to rise by upwards of 15% year after year. It's definitely a great time to be a beer drinker in America.

So, on this National Drink Beer Day, as fall has just begun, it’s going to be "Prost!" and pumpkins for me. I’ve listed some of my favorite Oktoberfest and fall-style beers below, some of which are sure to find their way into my belly today

Martina 09-28-2012 01:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ruffryder (Post 663445)
Bud Light fans don't lean toward either party, the same for those who drink Miller High Life.

Why does this not surprise me?

Stud_puppy1991 09-28-2012 01:18 PM

I love Shock Top, Guinness, Samuel Adams, Mongoose, Miller, Bud Light Lime, Bud Light Platinum, Heineken, Budweiser, Krillan's, Pilsener, and Doppelbock

Martina 09-28-2012 01:23 PM

I had to go to the main campus of my school an hour ago and heard on NPR Science Friday that they are making beer out of cheatgrass. As Ira Flatow said, Just another good reason to drink beer.

I have not stuck to my low carb regime sadly. I tried out a place that specializes in Belgian Beers. I hate that I cannot tell you where, or in this case even list the beers, because they are all theirs. But I have a safety issue online. So anyway, I was sorta disappointed. I really wonder if this place imagines itself as a chain or something because it felt like one of those BBQ places that's above average, but not really good. ANd I mean almost every beer. GOOD, but not special. And definitely aimed for the pallette that likes sweet, grainy, flowery -- just a loud beer. Between that and the alcohol content, I walked out of there feeling like a balloon. *burp*

weatherboi 09-28-2012 03:25 PM

Say hello to malt!!!

http://notg.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/oldchub.jpg

Okiebug61 09-28-2012 04:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by weatherboi (Post 663564)

Hello Malt!

Martina 10-02-2012 12:36 PM

Here's the transcript from the NPR thing I heard re making beer from cheatgrass. Actually it's just a small part of a a Science Friday edition of Talk of the Nation called Fires and Invasive Grass in the Great Basin.

Quote:

FLATOW: . . . there is somebody who's actually thought of what can we do with all these cheatgrass. And Tye Morgan is a biogeochemist and a homebrewer. She makes beer. And she said why not turn the cheatgrass into beer? And that's what they have been doing. She is also the owner of the Bromus - of Bromus Tech in Reno, Nevada, and she joins us from KUNR. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY, Dr. Morgan. Hi, there.

TYE MORGAN: Hello. How it's going?

FLATOW: Fine. How successful have you been in turning cheatgrass into beer?

MORGAN: Well, I've actually had great success turning cheatgrass into beer. We have actually made a 5 percent alcohol beer, and it actually tastes very well. I've had a lot of taste testers going through the process.

FLATOW: I had my test myself today just, so I could...

MORGAN: What...

FLATOW: I had a taste test myself, so I can verify.

(LAUGHTER)

MORGAN: So what do you think?

FLATOW: It's delicious. It's very good.

MORGAN: Yeah. It's quite shocking that people identify it as beer, first off. That was one of my big questions, was when we start making beer from it, what - are people going to identify it as beer? Are they going to identify it as some other product going on? So we hit our mark when they said, hey, this is beer.

And they said, oh, this is pretty good. You know, what is this? Is this like an amber ale, or is this like, you know, like a Boston lager? And I said, no. It's actually made from cheatgrass. And they kind of look at me and go, well, what's cheatgrass? So we've had really good success.

We're trying to get started in the harvesting process, working with the BLM. And our goal really isn't to turn cheatgrass into a crop, but to use - cheatgrass beer is almost like a land management tool, something that people could use as - they're kind of piggybacking the idea of green strips(ph).

So when we have these large wildfires, you get high nitrogen spikes following - two years post-following the wildfire, you will get a huge burst of cheatgrass. I say we come in there, and we do perimeter harvesting. When you take the perimeters out, you're going to reduce the seed bank. And by reducing the seed bank, we can follow the nitrogen, see when those seed banks get low enough, and then we could come in with some good restoration efforts at that point. But you can't go out and see when you have, you know, 65,000 seeds per square meter. You're just not going to get success out of that.

FLATOW: Both Jen and Mike are shaking their heads in agreement.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: You - how do you make beer? Out of which part of the cheatgrass do you make the beer?

MORGAN: I just take the seed. It's right off the top of the plant. So when we actually go out and do the harvesting, my criteria of the plant, it has to be at least six inches tall. And if it's six inches tall, when I go out with my vacuum, because that's the - when I first started this as a home brew, I'm taking a vacuum to the top of the seeds. And you don't want to suck up any soil. You want to leave the plant system intact, because as bad as cheatgrass is, there are still some good things to it.

If you have a fire that comes through, it's going to leave bare ground. Bare ground is your enemy in the Great Basin. We have bad wind erosion problems. And if you can get that plant in there, at least it's going to be a soil - at the very minimum, a soil stabilizer.

So I don't want to remove the plant. I just want to take the seeds. That's the highest part of the nitrogen in the plant. Just, you know, harvest two years in a row. Monitor the nitrogen, and then come in with restoration efforts, because cheatgrass will engineer the soil for itself.

FLATOW: So the cheatgrass seed...

MORGAN: It will...

FLATOW: ...is actually a good replacement for barley in the beer process?

MORGAN: Well, I don't want to say it's a good replacement for barley, because barley is an established agricultural crop. And the idea with cheatgrass is that it's kind of a migratory, unsustainable crop. We are - you know, the goal is to have a harvest way that is sustainable to the environment, but is not sustainable to cheatgrass.

And, like Mike was saying, you can only harvest two months out of the year. And you're not going to get the same weight that you would for barley. And so your - with cheatgrass beer, you know, to really have an impact, you need 1,200 tractors for two months going, and that's just not possible. So it's a niche market that has, you know, the potential for people to know every time they're drinking their beer, they're contributing to saving the desert...

(LAUGHTER)

MORGAN: ...or saving the (unintelligible).

(APPLAUSE)

FLATOW: As if we all need another reason to drink beer.

weatherboi 10-04-2012 05:28 PM

<3
 
http://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphoto...04487131_n.jpg

Delicious!!!

weatherboi 10-06-2012 05:26 PM

http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphoto...09161647_n.jpg

Duchess 10-06-2012 05:40 PM

Duck-Rabbit Milk Stout
Lion Stout
Three Philosophers
Grolsch
Fischer Amber


Duchess

Duchess 10-06-2012 05:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Uniqueswtfemm (Post 656089)
I like my beer with lemonade, yummy. Oh, and it's all about Shiner Bock right now :)


I also love Paulaner with orange slices. :)


Duchess

Fatale 10-06-2012 06:10 PM

The closer it tastes to water, the better for me, lol. I just cannot do all that dark beer. Ick. I'll just eat bread instead.

Duchess 10-06-2012 06:24 PM

Fatale, I bet you would love Duck-Rabbit Milk Stout ice cold, even though I drink it at room temp.

It's a full-bodied stout brewed with milk sugar, so there's a subtle sweetness. It's super smooth. Doesn't have the typical stout bite.:)


Duchess


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