ZirconBlue
Sole Survivor of L-Town
I'd figure it had to do with the fact that we like most of our drinks cold, our beer would naturally follow the trend
When INRM is the voice of reason in the thread, it's time to pack it in.
I'd figure it had to do with the fact that we like most of our drinks cold, our beer would naturally follow the trend
Heck... forget beer. Most people I know keep their hard liquors in the freezer.
This thread reminds me of a thread I read on a Japanese skeptics board... "なぜアメリカ人は彼らの肉が調理されたかのような?何が室温と悪いのでしょうか??"
...
Budweiser is feeling the pinch of microbreweries and they are making better quality beer themselves. One of the best brew pubs I have ever been too has a retired Budweiser brewmaster and her exact words when she retired was this. Now I can make the good stuff and she proceded to do that very thing. Her beer is cold and served in cold glasses.
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We just do. We drink imports and microbrews cold too. We like cold beer. That's what we like.
Interestingly, one microbrew owner I met (Stoudt's) somewhat disputed that proposition. As he put it, outfits like Bud produce millions and millions of bottles in multiple plants and you can't tell when or where it was produced. As he put it: "you can't do that without excellent quality control".
He went on to describe the real difference between his products and the mass market beers was the specialized variety of recipes which don't really appeal to a mass market, or recipes that are slow to produce or only suited to small batches.
I started this thread:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=188002
On much the same subject just a few days ago. Consensus of beer-related sites is that most "popular" beers are devoid of flavor, or just taste bad, and the extreme cold numbs the old taste-buds so you don't notice.
I refer to these as watery beer-like beverages.
The consensus is also that lighter beers in general should be served somewhat colder than heavier, darker brews, but that the optimum temperature is still considerably above the "coldest beer in town" level.
Even our local giant brewer, Anheuser-Busch, specifies that it's premium Michelob be served at between 45-50 degrees.
Theres also a loocal brewery here in Atlanta that makes a well crafted lager called sweetwater 420.
I don't remember that but you're right it was a stupid thing to do. Sam Adams is so much better than Budweiser that there is no comparison. Sam Adams is nectar compared to Budweiser.So does anyone else remember when Budweiser ran attack ads against Sam Adams beer?
Not a good move.
I don't remember that but you're right it was a stupid thing to do. Sam Adams is so much better than Budweiser that there is no comparison. Sam Adams is nectar compared to Budweiser.
Good. Budweiser and company also got a black eye in germany a few years back as I recall. The brewers of the swill shouldn't be arrogant because the only reason europeans would drink that crap is to get a cheap high. If you're into a well crafted good tasting brew you wouldn't wash your dog in budweiser.Yeah, it was not smart. What happened is that SA was advertising almost exclusively on the radio in the early 90's. Jim Koch, sounding a lot more like Mr. Rodgers than he does on the more modern TV ads, would talk about how great his beer was and the awards it won.
Anhauser -Busch (not budweiser - got my cheap evil smelling beers mixed up) put out radio ads where a booming god-like voice yelled at a Jim Koch imitator and stated how SA was being made in large contract breweries - the implication being that it therefore couldn't be as good as SA claimed since it wasn't all made in New England. They did this in radio ads, as well as print.
SA countered with a new ad where Cook talked about using the big breweries and comparing it to 'bringing my own ingredients, my own recipes, and my own cooking style to you kitchen but using some of your pots and pans'.
Bud dropped ads soon afterwards, not so much because the coutnerattack was so devastating but they probably realized that the ads made them look like bullies. A fact held up by National Ad Division of the BBB asking them to knock it off. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-19456036.html
But a lot of damage had been done, accord to Koch.
Cold masks the taste ofHorse PeeAmerican Beer.
PBS had a program a few years back about American Beer. At the turn of the 20th century, America was known as a producer of some of the world's best beer. Miller, Strohs, Pabst, Coors, Anheuser-Busch, Schlitz - all of these were German Brewmasters.
Then came Prohibition. Of course this had a devastating effect.
According to PBS, what finished-off the American beers was WWII. Shortages of barley led beer makers to use rice to make beer.
Good. Budweiser and company also got a black eye in germany a few years back as I recall. The brewers of the swill shouldn't be arrogant because the only reason europeans would drink that crap is to get a cheap high. If you're into a well crafted good tasting brew you wouldn't wash your dog in budweiser.
The US arguably makes some of the best beer on Earth.
Correct. About the argument bit, that is.....
Budweisers problem is that they demand that their beer tastes mediocre. It won't make you vomit and it won't make you gag. It just doesn't have the flavor better beers have. They use too much rice and corn. I mean white rice with gravy may be good but it doesn't make a good tasting brew. Neither does corn although a microbrewery in Athens Georgia experimented with a beer made of pure corn malt. They tried to make an ale out of it but it just didn't go over. I drank it and the word mediocre came to mind. It tasted like a Bud too much despite the use of hops and a darker corn roast. Overall it was better than a Bud but still not up to par with a wheat or barley brew.Excellent quality control does not equal excellent quality.