What's your favorite Beer?
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Starting a bit early today with the green tea IPA, very nice.
The green tea isn't overpowering (which is good, since I still want it to taste like a hoppy IPA). I mainly notice it in the aftertaste.
I read somewhere that someone got green tea ice cream vibes but I'm not getting that at all.
Gotta get used to all these hoppy warm weather beers again, been drinking too many stouts and porters! -
In the middle of an EPIC beer tasting at a buddy's house right now. Pics coming soon.
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Yes it is… Lemme know what yout hink of the Big Bad Barley... Only had the Big Worse... Reminds me to pick up the Worster they have @Geers...
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/mikkeller-big-worster-barley-wine/241653/
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Good, funky start, but the finish is too dry. Not a good balance.
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/struise-moeder-lambik/244931/
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Finished off the night with Yellow Rose, and damn I wasn't disappointed.
I'm not a huge IPA fan in general, but on a warm spring day I could see myself drinking this all day.
Might go as far as to say my favorite IPA I've ever had. Just simple, not over complicated and fresh.
I feel like a lot of breweries go over the top with their ingredients, trying to make their IPA stand out.
But these guys just made a simple, straight forward beer that's kind of back to basics.
Here's to hoping I can get many more bottles in the future! -
Merry Christmas.
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so @Megatron1505 uses a modified dildo to open up his bottles…well that actually explains a lot to me!
hahahah -
It reminds me is @Seul
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Also it looks like this one is usually called the Texas Porter, but I guess they changed this batch?
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/mikkeller-chipotle-porter/118993/
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Hey what's that funny looking snowman?
Surprise!
Ok so it isn't a great beer, but was a gift from a co-worker who knows I like stuff I cant get here. So cheers!
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First, a commentary on Colorado beer. I came here expecting a lot of one dimensional hopped ales. This expectation was based on exports I'd experienced and the presence of hippies who want their beer to taste like nugs. While they certainly have many of these, I have to say Midwestern brewers like Surly, Three Floyds, Founders, Bells, and many others seem to handle that genre more to my liking. The main exception so far has been Comrade, whose Superpower IPA is outstanding, and whose DIPA rivals the likes of Russian River's Pliny the Elder, Surly Abrasive or Three Floyd's Dreadnaught for American DIPA. One other "go-to" for a session pale in a bar setting is the ubiquitous Oskar Blues Dale's Pale Ale. This has replaced Summit, the local, ubiquitously available EPA in the Twin Cities, for me.
What has impressed me more than the pale ales here has been the general variety. There are astounding stouts, ales, and even lagers here. One of my very favorites has been Crooked Stave, who seem to specialize on sour ales. There are so many damn breweries they are forced to innovate to differentiate, which is great for consumers, if bad for people like me trying to limit beer consumption.
Finally, there is a burgeoning cider scene I haven even begun to investigate.
To the beer:
Get yo pucker on.From Crooked Stave on the Surette:
Wood Aged Farmhouse Ale brewed with Malted Barley, Wheat, Oats, Rye and Spelt. This beer is a recreation of early 20th century farmhouse provision ales. Surette was fermented and aged in our large oak foeder with Brettanomyces and Lactobacillus naturally present. The secondary fermentation with these critters creates complex aromas and a slight tartness