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Beer

So, what am I drinking?

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HuskyHawk

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We went
2024
2020
2022
2021
2023

And then went to the annual specialties.

Consensus was 2020 was the best. The 2024 Vanilla Rye was very good. I though the 2024 Macaroon was meh.
We had a 2022 or 2023 Proptietor's which is so good it's basically a different level.
I’ve had Proprietor’s at beer fests. Just incredible how many complex flavors they manage.
 

HuskyHawk

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Pale Ale at Widowmaker

IMG_4339.jpeg
 
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Looking forward to the 6th annual Cocoa Village Brewers Bash sponsored by Bugnutty tomorrow. Sixty breweries will be represented mostly from Fl and two excellent local bands.
 
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Living vicariously through you all.

I am donating stem cells to my brother next month so I have been alcohol and cigar free since I found out I was a donor match 23 days ago, not that I'm counting. I haven't gone this long without a beer since I was was 16!

I've been drinking Guinness Zero at home which is surprisingly close to the real thing. Also tried the Brooklyn Hoppy Amber that was OK but had a funk to it. I would like to find some of the Athletic Dark beers, but all I see are IPAs.

Any dry January peeps find anything worth trying?
 

HuskyHawk

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Living vicariously through you all.

I am donating stem cells to my brother next month so I have been alcohol and cigar free since I found out I was a donor match 23 days ago, not that I'm counting. I haven't gone this long without a beer since I was was 16!

I've been drinking Guinness Zero at home which is surprisingly close to the real thing. Also tried the Brooklyn Hoppy Amber that was OK but had a funk to it. I would like to find some of the Athletic Dark beers, but all I see are IPAs.

Any dry January peeps find anything worth trying?
A Noble sacrifice. Wish I could help more. I have tried the blue Athletic on. I also tried the Erdinger at a beer fest. I would think Stouts and pale lagers would hold up best.

 
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1000025097.jpg

Really enjoy these double dry hopes Pale Ales from Marlowe. They taste like an IPA but are only 5.4% which I enjoy. Marlowe really does some great beers
 

Waquoit

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Hey kibbe, have you made it to New Zealand yet? It is craft beer heaven!
 

Waquoit

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Have you been there and had the beer fresh? Or are you just going off getting a can that’s been shipped from the other side of the world? Because every beer I’ve had so far would be the best beer I ever had in Connecticut. Admittedly, I wouldn’t say I have the most developed beer pallet.
 

HuskyHawk

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Have you been there and had the beer fresh? Or are you just going off getting a can that’s been shipped from the other side of the world? Because every beer I’ve had so far would be the best beer I ever had in Connecticut. Admittedly, I wouldn’t say I have the most developed beer pallet.
That's interesting. We don't know what we don't know. I'd be surprised if they had breweries that were actually better than any of our best breweries. Freshness certainly matters and I think was a driving force in so many small craft breweries opening globally. Farm to table concepts apply.

There's no wine thread here (which is a bit odd) but I went to a winery in the Loire Valley, which is known (in the U.S. anyway) for really good Sauvignon Blanc from Sancere for example. The primary red grape is Cabernet Franc, which some say can't stand on its own (if grown in Bordeaux or Napa/Sonoma). Visited a winery with absolutely amazing Cabernet Franc wine, at a very fair price. Can't get it here of course. I imagine that story plays out even more with beer.
 

storrsroars

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That's interesting. We don't know what we don't know. I'd be surprised if they had breweries that were actually better than any of our best breweries. Freshness certainly matters and I think was a driving force in so many small craft breweries opening globally. Farm to table concepts apply.

There's no wine thread here (which is a bit odd) but I went to a winery in the Loire Valley, which is known (in the U.S. anyway) for really good Sauvignon Blanc from Sancere for example. The primary red grape is Cabernet Franc, which some say can't stand on its own (if grown in Bordeaux or Napa/Sonoma). Visited a winery with absolutely amazing Cabernet Franc wine, at a very fair price. Can't get it here of course. I imagine that story plays out even more with beer.
Funny thing about that response - if I were to go back to ANZ again, I imagine I'd do what I did the first time, which is drink wine all day. The exchange rates around 20% more than they were back in 2003, but still AUD is .064 and NZD .053, so all the wines still a significant bargain (we laughed at how little we paid 22 years ago and I had several cases shipped back home). And it was uniformly good from producers not sold in US. I can't imagine spending time searching out beer unless it was at some brewpub with amazing lunch grub.
 
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Have you been there and had the beer fresh? Or are you just going off getting a can that’s been shipped from the other side of the world? Because every beer I’ve had so far would be the best beer I ever had in Connecticut. Admittedly, I wouldn’t say I have the most developed beer pallet.
I would agree that i wouldn't trust a Kiwi beer that'd had to sit in a shipping container for a month and then in the store shelves after that. I'd even wonder about oxidation just being en route for that long.

Reason german beers hold up longer is that they don't... its more that they're not hop forward but oxidation still gets at them.

Now, I don't have the world's most precious tongue but I respect the time and beer question.

----

I wouldn't mind doing a 6 month vertical on one of the more reliable (quality and frequency) made IPAs. For argument lets say sips of sunshine. Say fresh as it can be, 3 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Seeing what I learn because while "I know" this to be true about hops I don't see it.
 

HuskyHawk

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I would agree that i wouldn't trust a Kiwi beer that'd had to sit in a shipping container for a month and then in the store shelves after that. I'd even wonder about oxidation just being en route for that long.

Reason german beers hold up longer is that they don't... its more that they're not hop forward but oxidation still gets at them.

Now, I don't have the world's most precious tongue but I respect the time and beer question.

----

I wouldn't mind doing a 6 month vertical on one of the more reliable (quality and frequency) made IPAs. For argument lets say sips of sunshine. Say fresh as it can be, 3 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Seeing what I learn because while "I know" this to be true about hops I don't see it.
German beers didn't hold up at all for a long, long time. But it was light stroke. It was the green glass. Several brewers considered pulling out of the U.S. until they figured it out. Now you see cans and the bottles are either brown or in cardboard that blocks light (or both). Heineken is Dutch but it was funny when they shipped fresh beers here finally and fans were like "what is this"? Where's that skunked flavor and smell I like? U.S. Heineken now vs 15 years ago is not even the same beer. Oddly, Rolling Rock has a similar skunked profile, guess why?

That said, unpasteurized modern hoppy IPAs simply can't tolerate much shipping or unrefrigerated time period. Even in cans, which are best. Who knows what environment they are in?
 
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interesting... I think so many seek to push the lines of IPAs so maybe not surprising. I dunno.
 

Waquoit

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I was just wondering if you were basing it on personal knowledge or on the opinion of others. Others have a dog in the fight. But I know a trend. I was here eight years ago and had a great IPA at a craft brewer. It was called “IPA”. I’m back eight years later and the same place has a bunch of different IPAs. Everybody has a great IPA over here now. I stand by my statement, New Zealand beers match if not surpass American beers. You need to find a way to get to New Zealand if you love beer.
 

HuskyHawk

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I was just wondering if you were basing it on personal knowledge or on the opinion of others. Others have a dog in the fight. But I know a trend. I was here eight years ago and had a great IPA at a craft brewer. It was called “IPA”. I’m back eight years later and the same place has a bunch of different IPAs. Everybody has a great IPA over here now. I stand by my statement, New Zealand beers match if not surpass American beers. You need to find a way to get to New Zealand if you love beer.
Well I have to be honest here. I drink a lot of very good IPAs and while I do like some of the New Zealand hop beers, mostly they are not my favorites. The profile of a lot of them is heavily tilted toward grassy Sauvignon Blanc type flavors. So I don't accept that they grow better hops than we do or the Germans do. I think what they've done is expanded the range of flavors and aromas that hops can provide. That's great, people can showcase those or blend them and creativity is enhanced overall.

Hops are so interesting. Most of my life I did not like Pilsners, especially Czech. Turns out I just don't like the spicy hop profile. When somebody varies it with a more citrusy US hop I like the beer.
 

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