Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Roger A. Baylor wrote:It's what I've been saying for a very long time, expressed quite nicely at the Hoosier Beer Geek blog out of Indianapolis.
Shane Campbell wrote:Oh sorry Roger, what were you saying?
Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Roger A. Baylor wrote:Shane Campbell wrote:Oh sorry Roger, what were you saying?
Actually, what I was saying was this: Look, ma, a Mexican joint that finally GETS IT WHEN IT COMES TO BEER.
But I richly enjoyed your digression, Shane. Now I must proceed to the Research & Development Brewery at the Pizzeria & Public House to watch NABC and Flat12 brew something sour.
Jeff Cavanaugh wrote:A good beer list is nice, as is a decent wine list, but if a place has great food I'll still go even if they have neither.
Shane Campbell wrote:Roger A. Baylor wrote:It's what I've been saying for a very long time, expressed quite nicely at the Hoosier Beer Geek blog out of Indianapolis.
What were you saying?
Hey, we could talk about roadworks and vacuum bags ad nauseum. Wait – we did that already. OOOH HOW DARE I? I know, I live in the sticks where road works consist mostly of scraping up last nights pickup flattened possum haul and...... I don't even eat sushi. Doesn't eat sushi? GET OUT!
Also, I say burn that damn meat for hours with real smoke and fire. Present it to us with flash burns still on your face and we will love you for it. Slow boil it for hours at low temp and dump a bit of smoke flavor in at the end and we'll just refer you to Doc Crows with an “already been done.” Just don't cook it for 20+ hours like some and call it Juicy's. That wretched stuff is a blender away from being meat sauce.
Shane Campbell
In Time Out Room
626
Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:08 pm
Hoosierville
Ryan Rogers wrote:This kind of ignorance is the exact problem that the craft beer community faces with domestic beer drinkers who don't know any better and don't care to know any better. So instead of giving something a shot or even attempting to educate themselves before they speak they willfully spout forth a critique of something they know very little about...
I have some pork butts going low and slow in the smoker right now since 1am this morning... with real smoke and fire.
Also Doc Crows cooks their meat with real smoke in a very very expensive professional smoker.
Robin Garr wrote:Jeff Cavanaugh wrote:A good beer list is nice, as is a decent wine list, but if a place has great food I'll still go even if they have neither.
I agree about 90 percent, Jeff, but would argue that - for a white-tablecloth restaurant or bistro, at least - lack of attentiveness to a decent wine list is often (if not always) a worrisome sign of a lack of commitment in other areas as well.
I admire Roger's efforts to push the beer list into this same defining category and am happy to work more quietly on the food-critic margins to help push this happy world into reality.
Shane Campbell wrote:We trekked way out to Peewee Valley a few months ago to get some bbq from a place I've been hearing about for years. The place is called Jucy's. I mistakenly assumed it was called Juicy's because the brisket I was served was one step away from soup.
Steve P wrote:There are several places in town that serve reasonably good BBQ...and there are several places in town that have good beer lists, unfortunately I have yet to find great BBQ and great beer in the same place. Smokey Bones probably comes about as close as anything I've found locally.
Hmmmmmm.....perhaps I have stumbled on to a concept worthy of bringing me out of retirement.
"A restaurant without any decent beer choices is willfully ignorant, and doesn't deserve your money."
Paul S wrote:"A restaurant without any decent beer choices is willfully ignorant, and doesn't deserve your money."
I know it sounds almost absurd to many, but restaurants really should heed this warning.
All of the mid $ range restaurants I frequent have good beer selection, and I would not be there if they didn't. From my experience, the same is true for many in the 25-39 year-old crowd.
Exceptions to the rule for me would include sushi and high-end restaurants.
Paul S wrote:
Exceptions to the rule for me would include sushi and high-end restaurants.
Rob Coffey wrote:There are places I go without good beer selections, but sushi doesnt have to be that way. See Maido, for example. However, I guess that Thai and Cuban and Mexican seem to be my exceptions to the rule. But if a Thai place would carry a decent beer selection, I would actually order a beer while there, so they are missing out.
And I see no reason for high-end restaurants not to have a decent beer list. They are probably the least forgivable, IMO.
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