Savage_ScreenMonkey |
Lilith wrote:Trois Pistoles is damn fine, particularly when paired with a loaf of crusty bread and a bowl of halibut chowder.Wow...
I am so proud to know that a beer breewed by a company from Quebec (my home province) is known in the States. I realy did not know that it was exported
Trivia: Unibroue was started by Robert Charlebois a popular singer here in Quebec.
My own personnal choices:
Commercial: Good Old Molson EX (known as Molson Canadian in the rest of north america)
Native: La Fin du Monde (same breewer as the Trois Pistoles), Boréale and Sleeman's Silver Creek
Imported: Hoegaarden and Leffe (both are Belgian beers)
Cheers !!!!!
Hey a fellow Montrealer, Go Habs Go!
Kittyburger |
The best beer you can get is the best beer from your favorite local microbrewery. Think global, drink local.
Past that, if you're in a roughly four-state radius of Minnesota (sadly, not in Canada), you should be able to get Summit, and their Extra Special Bitter is a good session bitter.
I've also found a strong liking for the St. Peter's brewery over in England.
R-type |
Kronenbourg Blanc
Blanc is the refreshing, fruity, white beer imported from France. The 5% ABV premium draught and bottled white beer has been created by the master brewers of Brasseries Kronenbourg, inspired by the 13th century Cervoise simple brewing style.
Served cloudy in a continental style, its underlying tones of coriander and cloves with a balance of subtle citrus and soft fruit flavours are intriguingly distinctive. Best served chilled at 3°c for a refreshing, clean and crisp taste.
I like it with a nice vegetable curry. :)
The Tiger Lord |
Hey a fellow Montrealer, Go Habs Go!
YEAH,
Opening Nignt is today !!!
First Game of the season in Montreal !!!!!! A lot of Molson EX will be drank tonight.
Cheers to all the Habs fans and Booooo to Hurricanes fans (not a real boooo just a you do not like the same team as me)
James Keegan |
I generally choose beers based on the cartoon character on the label. Hobgoblin is pretty good and in the fall, you can't beat Shipyard Pumpkinhead. Newcastle, Guiness, Yvengling (only when I'm in New York, though, since CT doesn't get it) and Heineken are typical for me when the fun microbrews with the punky labels aren't available.
At Otto's Shrunken Head (I almost typed 'Otto's Drunken Head' which would also be appropriate) I'll also give tiki drinks a try every now and then, though I typically just buy those for a friend that prefers girl drinks.
Kruelaid |
I live in Belgium, so I can consider myself a beer master.
Try Maredsous (or at least Orval or Chimay... I can accept a good old Leffe), and only then you'll be able to talk about good beer. There's nothing like an abbey belgian beer.
;)
So those who don't live in Belgium can't consider themselves beer masters....
And those who haven't tried Maredsous shouldn't even be posting about good beer....
Belgian beer: those most obvious characteristic I noticed was EXPENSIVE. Second: fancy bottles. Third: great beer. I also met a few Belgians and I noticed some of your countrymen, as you, treat their beer like chapagne. I've had Orval, it's good. I've also had Latrappe, Duvel, L'Alsacienne and a few others (Leffe too I think) I've forgotten because I was a bartender in a restaurant with a about 400 labels of beer (on a good week).
Alas, the world moves on and Trappist monks don't and there are great beers all over the world now unless you are a beer snob. And beer, it seems to me, is the beverage of common man, making beer and elitism antithetical.
To be prefectly honest, the Belgian stuff was no better than the great German beers, and I suspect even if I tried the "impossible to find export" Maresdous I wouldn't say that the great search is over.
Because the search is 90 percent of the fun, and during my search I have found dozens of great beers coming from every country I have visited.
;)
Cheers to beer!
Fake Healer |
As weird as this may sound to some, I bought a mixed case by Michelob (Ales and Lagers Collection)that had 5 each of these beers:
Porter
Pale Ale
Marzen (an Octoberfest brew)
Wheat.
I loved the Marzen and the Porter was wonderfully delicious (slightly chocolate flavouring to it). I am trying out the Pale Ale tonight and the Wheat tomorrow night.
So far I am loving them all and $17 for 20 beers makes me very happy!
I got it at my local BJs (wholesale club warehouse).
FH
Fake Healer |
As weird as this may sound to some, I bought a mixed case by Michelob (Ales and Lagers Collection)that had 5 each of these beers:
Porter
Pale Ale
Marzen (an Octoberfest brew)
Wheat.I loved the Marzen and the Porter was wonderfully delicious (slightly chocolate flavouring to it). I am trying out the Pale Ale tonight and the Wheat tomorrow night.
So far I am loving them all and $17 for 20 beers makes me very happy!
I got it at my local BJs (wholesale club warehouse).FH
The Pale Ale was a typical english beer (Pi$$-water, imo) and I didn't really enjoy it, but the Bavarian Wheat was excellent! And rather potent, hee-hee, Fakey found himself staggering about a bit last night after 4 of 'em.
All in all a great case where 15 of the 20 were of excellent quality for $15.99 (I posted a higher price previously). Pretty cheap considering that most 6 packs are running $8-10 bucks for specialty beers.FH
Timitius Wayfinder, PaizoCon Founder |
James Keegan |
Tobus Neth |
James Keegan |
R-type wrote:Where can this beer be purchased?Has anyone mentioned these little boozy D&D beauties?
I've only tried the WychCraft blonde myself though. :) Quite nice.
The better importers in America sell them on occasion. I've found the huge bottled Hobgoblin in one of those big liquor stores where you can make your own six pack of microbrew beers.
Tegan |
In no particular order with the exception of the 1st one...
Shiner - Bock
Live Oak - Big Bark Amber
Independence - Pale Ale
Sam Adams - Octoberfest (yeah, it's the only non-Texas beer listed, hence the reason it's at the bottom)
GentleGiant |
Newcastle Brown Ale (from tap preferably)
Kronenbourg 1664
Tuborg
Carlsberg had a Beer Election in 2003, where the second place went to a beer called Carlsberg Capo. That was absolutely positively delicious.
7.7% and with added elderberry juice. Sweet taste and would get you hammered quicker than you thought.
All of the mainstream American beers I've tasted have seriously let me down, they're all basically like having sex in a canoe.
Haven't tried any of the beers from US microbreweries, though.
Craig Shackleton Contributor |
Cosmo Director of Sales |
HOW DID I MISS THIS THREAD THE FIRST TIME 'ROUND?!?
My current favorites are...
The first two are by New Belgium Brewery (the guys that make Fat Tire)
***EDIT***
the actual text:
Rolling Rock, from the glass lined tanks of Old Latrobe we tender this premium beer for your enjoyment as a tribute to your good taste. It comes from the mountain springs to you. “33”
K... so I'm not a complete drunk.
Benoist Poiré |
Draught Guinness, from a tap pressurized with Nitrogen (I've ordered it many times, unknowingly from CO2 taps... and it SUCKS). Very cold but not frozen - I let it warm up a bit and rest for the flavor.
Kilkenny.
Blue Chimay is good too.
Or Canadian Beers, particularly Amber Ales.
A cold Kro 1664 is great on warm days. With Sauerkraut too.
Daeglin |
Ok, might be a little dated, but I'm adding to my list:
Had the chance to try mead for the first time. I know technically its probably not a beer, but it was a pub with a microbrewery on the back brewing their own stuff so I'm counting it as one. Apparently they brew up a batch once a summer. Anyway, it was interesting, Lion's Mead (might have been Lion's Head Mead - it was a long night). I think its an acquired taste, but cool to drink something I've ordered "in game" so often.
Mairkurion {tm} |
What an encouraging (and thirst-whetting) thread! Is there some correlation between imagination and good taste, or did people half in love with the middle ages just naturally gravitate towards more traditional beers?
In recent years, I've regularly enjoyed Koningshoeven Trappist Ale (quadrupel more than dubbel). Though this is made across the border in the Netherlands, all the Belgian ales mentioned above would make my list.
Did Duvel and la Chouffe already get mentioned? Heck, even Stella Artois is more drinkable than your run-of-the-mill beer, especially in the summer time.
Since we have a few root beer drinkers, and in light of the situation on Galveston Island, I must say that the best root beer I have ever had in my life comes from the fountains of La King's Confectionary on the Strand.
Daeglin |
What an encouraging (and thirst-whetting) thread! Is there some correlation between imagination and good taste, or did people half in love with the middle ages just naturally gravitate towards more traditional beers?
Gamers do love their brew. Locally, we have Oktoberfest coming up, and while in general it is quantity that garners the most attention this time of year, it does start to whet my appetite to try some brews I haven't before.
Mairkurion {tm} |
Gamers do love their brew. Locally, we have Oktoberfest coming up, and while in general it is quantity that garners the most attention this time of year, it does start to whet my appetite to try some brews I haven't before.
I knew this of my own little circle, but I guess I never had anything to compare it with it, and just figured that the generally horrendous taste of Americans when it comes to beer would fall out the same proportionately among gamers.
Callous Jack |
Rogue's Dead Guy Ale was a favorite of mine and I also usually went with Bass, LongTrail or Sierra Nevada.
I liked Yuengling when I lived in Philly, but they don't sell it around here. Check out this guy's website btw. He mentions a local brewer who is making pizza beer! (wtf?!)
http://www.joesixpack.net/index.htm
Also for anyone ever in Philly, I recommend Monk's Cafe for Belgian beer goodness and Ludwig's Garten to get your German fix.
Pete Whalley |
Mmm, beer...
I'm a cider supper lately, favouring Scrumpy Jack and Kopparberg Perry, but I do enjoy my beer as the colder months approach. (Cider being reserved only for the summer months of course).
Abbot Ale is a wonderful smooth ale, nice easy drinking for an afternoon session. A hand rolled smoke adds a lot to it's flavour.
Newcastle Brown is the nightclub beer of choice, since it's fairly light, and the indestructible bottles ensure a lack of breakage in case of dance-related accident :)
Pendle Witch is a local brew, so always welcome and I've a soft spot for Leffe at times.
If I'm drinking at home it's either Hobgoblin or Fiddler's Elbow. Maybe a bottle of Champion Badger. My indoors drinking is normally either Tequila or Johnny Walker Black Label though.
magdalena thiriet |
Mmm, beer...
I'm a cider supper lately, favouring Scrumpy Jack and Kopparberg Perry, but I do enjoy my beer as the colder months approach. (Cider being reserved only for the summer months of course).
I am partial to ciders too, though Kopparberg Perry (and Kopparbergs in general) tend to be too sweet for my taste...but a pint of Magners is always welcome.
Of the traditional beers, I had an opportunity to recently taste a Belgian lambic beer, cannot remember the brand, but apparently the most hardcore of them all...and it was quite "this is what evil must taste like".
Aberzombie |
Sweet! My beer thread lives.
Since I started this, I've come to expand my list of favorites:
Young's Double Chocolate Stout, Hobgoblin and Scarecrow from Wychwood, Sam Smith's IPA, and Stoudt's Fat Dog.
I've also started drinking more of the Abita beers. The store I go to sells a "Party Pack" that has 6 different beers (2 each): Amber, Turbo Dog, Purple Haze, and an IPA are the standards. The vary the remainders, among Abita Golden, Abita Light, and their seasonal beers. My favorite's of their seasonal's have been a Red Ale, A Wheat Beer, and Abita's Restoration Pale Ale.
I finally purchased by brew kit recently, and I'm looking forward to brewing my first batch.