Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Matthew D
Foodie
1347
Sun Jun 22, 2008 11:22 am
No Longer Old Louisville
Stephen D wrote:I really enjoyed reading your perspective on this!
As you know, I just finished the first installment of a beer program and am finding myself wanting to know more, not less of the subject. And more importantly- to gain a certain insight into the mind of a beer geek consumer.
Your premise fits exactly into my conundrum- How best to do this with limited slots. Indeed, we will always be a bottle-only establishment. It's simply the style of the bar. That should never mean that the beers get second billing, though.
(One simply has to listen to those with more knoweledge or passion on the subject)
I'm a cocktail guy, but it doesn't mean I don't love-love-love craft brewing or fine wines. Quite the opposite- at Bank Street, I drink beer. At L & N, it's wine. I wouldn't know if they could produce a textbook Negroni on command!
Thanks again for this, you did me a great justice mate.
Matthew D wrote:When my gf and I dine/drink out, she tends to go for the Pilsner or Wheat. For me, it's the Bitter, Amber, or IPA. Always nice to end up somewhere that tries to cover the spectrum. Granted, if there's a nice brown on tap, we both go for that.
Shane Campbell wrote:Porters/Stouts
These come in all kinds of varieties. From the least aggressive and most popular forms like Guinness, Murphys, and Beamish to delicious chocolate, oatmeal, and coffee'd varieties from Young's, Samuel Smith. All of the local breweries have variations that are good like NABC's Community Dark and 15B. I want to try the new coffee'd one from Cumberland. I stay away from the Imperial Stouts as they are very strong.
Shane Campbell wrote:Wheat Beer
Upland in Bloomington makes a very popular wheat beer. Bell's Oberon, Blue Moon, and Sam Adams also make wheat beers with wide appeal. BBC's is quite good. I'm not too picky with this category. When I'm in the mood for a wheat beer most any will do. Some taste a bit like orange, lemon, or other spices. The German's do lots of them but I prefer the American versions.
Shane Campbell wrote:
Belgians come in so many varieties, from Stella Artois (lager) to brown ales and kriek (cherry) beers. Doubles/triples are all the rage these days. American brewers including the locals are all doing them. They are the latest thing but don't usually appeal to me as they are often 8% ABV or more.
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Strictly speaking, American-style wheats tend to be both tasteless and senselessly tortured with fruit slices.
FRUIT BELONGS IN WALDORF SALAD, NOT ON YOUR BEER GLASS. EVER.
Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Very thoughtful digression, Shane, and an excellent style teaching moment.
Shane Campbell wrote:Porters/Stouts
These come in all kinds of varieties. From the least aggressive and most popular forms like Guinness, Murphys, and Beamish to delicious chocolate, oatmeal, and coffee'd varieties from Young's, Samuel Smith. All of the local breweries have variations that are good like NABC's Community Dark and 15B. I want to try the new coffee'd one from Cumberland. I stay away from the Imperial Stouts as they are very strong.
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Community Dark is neither a Porter nor a Stout. It is a Mild -- session strength, usually brown/black, malt accented, not much hop, English brewing heritage. Mild actually is a sub-style of Brown Ale.
Shane Campbell wrote:Wheat Beer
Upland in Bloomington makes a very popular wheat beer. Bell's Oberon, Blue Moon, and Sam Adams also make wheat beers with wide appeal. BBC's is quite good. I'm not too picky with this category. When I'm in the mood for a wheat beer most any will do. Some taste a bit like orange, lemon, or other spices. The German's do lots of them but I prefer the American versions.
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Strictly speaking, American-style wheats tend to be both tasteless and senselessly tortured with fruit slices.
FRUIT BELONGS IN WALDORF SALAD, NOT ON YOUR BEER GLASS. EVER.
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Upland and Blue Moon are representative of Belgian-style Wit (white/wheat) and have the orange/citrus character. German wheat ales have fermentation by products reminiscent of banana, apple and clove. Oberon, while "American," is a hybrid with elements of different wheat traditions.
Shane Campbell wrote:
Belgians come in so many varieties, from Stella Artois (lager) to brown ales and kriek (cherry) beers. Doubles/triples are all the rage these days. American brewers including the locals are all doing them. They are the latest thing but don't usually appeal to me as they are often 8% ABV or more.
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Stella is an example of Pilsner,a style not native to Belgium. Stella is about as much "Belgian" as I am Republican. Of ales exhibiting genuine Belgian heritage and flavor, quite a few are not 8% or higher. Wit beers (above) are sub-5%, as are pale ales like De Koninck. Most lambics and many sours are less than 6%. NABC's Tafelbier, which we jokingly refer to as "Imperial" Table Beer, is 4%
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Learning about beer while we drink beer is fun and instructive. Thanks, Shane.
Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Roger A. Baylor wrote:FRUIT BELONGS IN WALDORF SALAD, NOT ON YOUR BEER GLASS. EVER.
DanB wrote:Roger A. Baylor wrote:FRUIT BELONGS IN WALDORF SALAD, NOT ON YOUR BEER GLASS. EVER.
Get stuck in a whorehouse in Nuevo Laredo sometime with nothing but Cerveza Superiore and you'll be trying to stuff bananas in the bottle.
Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
DanB wrote:Roger A. Baylor wrote:FRUIT BELONGS IN WALDORF SALAD, NOT ON YOUR BEER GLASS. EVER.
Get stuck in a whorehouse in Nuevo Laredo sometime with nothing but Cerveza Superiore and you'll be trying to stuff bananas in the bottle.
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