Beer is generally better out of a tap, but I have never had a bad beer out of a can or bottle, but quite a few out of a tap, probably due to contaminated lines.
Dare I suggest that a question of taste might simply be due to...taste?
This requires serious investigation. Skeptic team: to the pub!
Ratskeller (The Rat Cellar).
Yeah sure, whose taste?
Do hoppy beers transfer their flavor to a bottle as well as beers with fewer hops?
What if it is in a green bottle?
What if it is in a brown or clear bottle?
Are you talking about a pressurized Keg? or a Gravity Cask Conditioned keg?
Uh... no, wrong.
That's Rat as in "City Council" and not the rodent.
(They might call it a rat cellar there, or it might even be one, but it's not what the word means.)
Uh... no, wrong.
That's Rat as in "City Council" and not the rodent.
(They might call it a rat cellar there, or it might even be one, but it's not what the word means.)
I would suggest that the tap vs. bottle is more about texture than flavor. It may have something to do with the liberation of nitrogen and CO2 from the beer in the form of bubbles. The kegged beer is likely under a lot more pressure than the bottled/canned beer. Texture has a huge effect on how something "tastes."
Yeah sure, whose taste?
Do hoppy beers transfer their flavor to a bottle as well as beers with fewer hops?
What if it is in a green bottle?
What if it is in a brown or clear bottle?
Are you talking about a pressurized Keg? or a Gravity Cask Conditioned keg?
Amen brother.This requires serious investigation. Skeptic team: to the pub!
If you had ever seen the main show area (in the basement) you'd understand why my translation was appropriate. Alas for all it's dingy, nastiness the place is one of the most missed clubs in the city. Some of the best punk rock shows took place there.
.There was a famous underground music bar/club in Boston known as the Ratskeller (The Rat Cellar). Rumor has it they never ever cleaned their lines in some 40+ years of business.
While I am sure this was an exaggeration, all the beer on tap there did have an odd salty flavor, which may mean the lines were rarely cleaned.
That's Rocky Mountain spring bilgewater, to you.
Several cities also get their drinking water from the same creek, but there is definitely enough iron and other metals to affect the taste. Of course "Made with pure Rocky Mountain mine waste" wouldn't sell a lot of beer. I have also noticed that, in recent years, their ads say "pure Rocky Mountain water", whereas, they used to say "pure Rocky Mountain springwater". Of course, the water still tastes better than the beer.
My wife and I had a conversation over lunch yesterday when I mentioned that a particular beer I liked tasted better on tap than in bottles bought in the store. She said that she would expect the opposite to be true...since beer on tap is stored in aluminum, the beer should take on a metallic taste, while bottled beer would taste more pure because it's stored in glass.
She went on to theorize that perhaps the difference in taste is purely psychological...beer on tap is supposed to taste better, so it does.
I don't think this is true, but I can't think of any particular reason why beer on tap would taste better. Anyone have any ideas?
We used to joke that the Bud brewery next to the Houston Ship Channel wasn't tanking their water in from Colorado ..Coors gets their water from Clear Creek. The drainage of Clear Creek is riddled with abandoned gold and silver mines. However, since the Superfund cleanup of the Argo Mill in Idaho Springs, the metal content of Clear Creek has been reduced to the point that the creek now supports trout. It used to have very few trout, as trout do not tolerate much metal content in the water. However, the idea that Coors uses really good water to make their beer is laughable. I'm not claiming that their are any health hazards. Several cities also get their drinking water from the same creek, but there is definitely enough iron and other metals to affect the taste. Of course "Made with pure Rocky Mountain mine waste" wouldn't sell a lot of beer. I have also noticed that, in recent years, their ads say "pure Rocky Mountain water", whereas, they used to say "pure Rocky Mountain springwater". Of course, the water still tastes better than the beer.