The funny thing is that the beer everyone at the poker game likes, my Kristalweizen, was by far my worst scored beer. I brew it as a crowd pleaser and as that it is a success. It is my simplest and cheapest beer. It is also the beer most like a Bud Light, go figure. My wife's grandmother's sister had this reaction at the last family reunion: "Ohh, this is good. It tastes just like a Michelob." When she saw the horror on my face she said, "I really like Michelob."
I'm not going to sugar coat this, I hate beer with fruit or fruit flavoring.
Lol oops. I hate fruit flavored beers is what I was trying to say.
Your Kristalweizen has been my least favorite, & I mean that as a compliment of course.
Some blueberry hefes are pretty damn tasty.
My hate of fruity beers has nothing to do with being manly either.
Yeah those arent bad. Kind of tastes like someone brewed a hefe and put in some blueberry flavoring after the fact. Rather just have the hefe.
My hate of fruity beers has nothing to do with being manly either. It just tastes terrible.
I ended up with some left over Sam Adams Cherry Wheat from a BBQ earlier this Summer. Hard to even choke down.
Did I know your name is Jared?
Oh, and major KUDOS to you, that's a great accomplishment. Like Nate said, it's cool to see someone have such success from their hobby.
If I make a special trip to SLC to try some of your beer, will you pour me a pint? Then I'll chase it down with some chocolate goodies from the shop where jazz_fanatic works!
What's an English Pale Ale? I've been tending towards drinking India Pale Ales these days. Any similarity?
Sorry I missed the last one. I'll be down for this, though. Let me know some dates so I can have beer ready.Nice! The byu game will be the first full on tailgate. I'll be happy to contribute some funds.
I was about to. I was drinking pretty heavily that night and missed it.Strange you didn't bite on the brewpub post...
I was about to. I was drinking pretty heavily that night and missed it.
Great job, GF. I've brewed a few batches in my lifetime and they've all sucked donkey balls. I've been considering opening a brewpub ....
I have zero experience working in a commercial brewery. I've worked in restaurants, but as a prep-cook, dishwasher, waiter. Anyway, I day-dream about opening an English themed pub with traditional English style beers and playing heavily on my family name and local (LDS) culture. St. George wouldn't be my first choice for a location.
I have zero experience working in a commercial brewery. I've worked in restaurants, but as a prep-cook, dishwasher, waiter. Anyway, I day-dream about opening an English themed pub with traditional English style beers and playing heavily on my family name and local (LDS) culture. St. George wouldn't be my first choice for a location.
How much do you think a local would need to sell its beer for? UTC has been begging for a half decent bar for 15+ years.
Carona and Budweiser might be in the same style, but one is like drinking water and the other is like drinking a gym sock that has been worn by the center of a college football team all season long without being washed, and then used to clean a baby's blowout diaper. Seriously, I'd rather drink my own bathwater than a Carona.
Apologize right now for all your previous Gameface beer bashing. I'm not even a drinker myself, but first place is first place.
Corona is in a clear bottle. Check this out. https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f39/light-damage-26389/
Reduced iso-humulones and hydroisohumulones
It has long been known that iso-alpha acids in the presence of sunlight undergo transformations to forms which produce a "skunky" or "light struck" flavor in beer. This is why beer is packaged in light proof bottles. Research on the chemical transformation of iso-alpha acids (isohumulones) revealed that upon reduction to dihydro (rho) isohumulones the capacity to produce skunkiness is lost and the potential to produce light resistant beer using reduced isohumulones was recognized.
Hydrogenation of the dihydroisohumulones produces the tetrahydroisohumulones and further reduction generates the hexahydroisohumulones. These two forms of isohumulone are also light resistant.
Brewing experience with the different forms of reduced isohumulones show that they differ in their relative bitterness and in their capacity to contribute foam stability. A summary of the effects relative to standard isohumulones is given in Table VII together with the other details of these products.
Using various chemical procedures it is also possible to prepare the hydroisohumulones from the beta acids (lupulones) of the hop resins.
Today a number of the world's main brewing groups produce beer in clear glass bottles. Some of these are not known to use light stable bitterness but to rely on packaging and distribution to eliminate light struck flavor. Others do use reduced isohumlones and/or hydroisohumulones to produce a completely light resistant beer.