What's your favorite Beer?
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The chocolate, hazelnut and raspberry truffle porters I bought were a bust. They all tasted like shit [emoji107]
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So true @emceeQ - really good balance. I love the deep Ellen beers for their smart takes on easy drinking classics, but this might actually be the best brew out of Dallas right now.
@formulapfaff and I continued our tradition of ramen followed by some beer sharing
Kirin with the ramen and karaage
Then Funky Gold Simcoe
And Anderson Valley Briney melon Gose
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Apéritive for 11 people in an hour… Took out some glasswear - let's see how many I get right...
I use Oerbier glasses (big) for Westmalle and the small ones for white wine.
My brother is also bringing another two Orval glasses just in case...
Couple 1:
-him Westmalle or Orval or geuze
-her white wineCouple 2:
-him special geuze of my choice
-her water (good muslim)Couple 3:
-him Westmalle
-her white wineCouple 4:
-him well this bastard will try and get some Verdant for him and his missus but he won't get any
-him and her will share 44cls can of my choice and then maybe a gin-tonic (lush life)Couple 5:
-him Oerbier or Orval (bad muslim)
-her water (bad muslim but pregnant)Me:
-baby I'm starting things with the Verdant glass for a Papaya IPA
-then I switch to the Modern Times glass for a fresh as fuck Verdant DIPA -
Any of you try anything by Decadent Ales? They’re a NY brewery that makes a lot of dessert beers, kinda like Omnipollo. Curious if their beer is any good
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Not sure if there's any wheat in it. Hazy beers are getting pretty trendy around here lately, and I'm not sure if it's a wheat thing, or what? I guess I need to do a little research.
It's nice to be read! I know I've been a little absent lately, but I'm still here in spirit. Glad to get back to spending some time with you fine folks!
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New beer from Firestone Walker. Their take on a NEIPA.
Tastes great and hard to beat at 10$ a six pack. -
This is very good.
This is even better.
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This was good after a 15 months cellared I didn’t taste any blueberry. Very nutty though
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…or anyone else here that drinks dessert beers, what are your thoughts on their popularity? Are dessert beers a fad or is it here to stay? I downloaded the untapped app for my iphone and added a couple dozen dessert beers to my wishlist. My question is, how often do these beers taste as advertised? I have to admit that stuff like maple pancakes, pecan pie, pina colada milkshake or whatever other indulgence sounds really good on the surface, but I wonder how closely a lot of them match their advertised flavor? I know beer making is a science so maybe @emceeQ can shed some light on this? I look at the beer ratings on untapped and most of them seem to have 4 star ratings out of 5, albeit with a few negative comments sprinkled throughout.
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Obviously there is a lot of personal taste involved here but a stout should still be a stout imho. That is to say it needs to taste like beer above all else. The dessert stouts I've had that have actually tasted like the desserts they're named after have managed that by using artificial flavouring and have been uniformly awful as a result. Amunden's are a good example.
Stouts have often been inclined to be sweet, have chocolate or caramel notes, or use lactose. Adding berries, coffee, vanilla, nibs, chilli or other natural flavourings is a natural progression. Mix in the high alcohol content and barrel ageing and you have enormous opportunities for complexity and variety.
The creative naming of dessert stouts seems to me to be a result of the things they are inspired by as opposed to an effort to make them actually taste like that dessert. That may be changing now as dessert stouts have become a more popular sub genre. As with most other beer genre's some brewers do great work and others come up with shite. There's a lot of mediocrity in-between.