Murph5472
Member
HA HA HA HA...Leave it to the two Pittsburghers to find the best ways of getting cheap beer at Disney!!!!!
:ROFLOL:
HAHA! Right with you guys!!!!
HA HA HA HA...Leave it to the two Pittsburghers to find the best ways of getting cheap beer at Disney!!!!!
Phonedave said:While I like hops myself, more does not mean better. There is a balance that needs to be there.
Favorite beer joke:
The Guinness salesman, Coors Salesman, and Bud salesman walk into a bar.
The Coors guy says "I'd like a tall frosty Coors, please."
The Bud guy says "Give me an ice-cold Bud Light".
The Guinness guy says "I'll take a glass of milk, please"
The other two look at him strangely, and he says,
"Well, if you guys aren't going to drink beer, neither am I."
:lol:
Two favorite beer quotes:
"American beer is like making love in a canoe."
"Put it back in the horse." H. Allen Smith, after he drank his first American beer.
Granted, they don't hold as true since the craft beer resurgence.
**Sigh**
US citizens expounding on the "quality" of their beer.... :brick:
**Sigh**
US citizens expounding on the "quality" of their beer.... :brick:
lol I love Canadian Beer as well!!! In particular Moosehead, Molson Golden, Molsen Ice, and Labatt
:ROFLOL: I'll never forget introducing a couple of Marines to Molson Brador in Montreal in the 70's.... They didn't last long, sadly. :lookaroun
In reality, Brador is rather uninspired as a beer, it's only claim to fame is its alcohol content. If you want a really great Canadian beer, Fin du Monde [the end of the world], is a beautifully crafted beer, stronger than Brador at 9%, but not a beer for guzzling anyway. Worth savouring. :king:
We have a lot of beers brewed under license here, even a Guinness draft that's on par with the original [I've had both at the respective breweries and they were both top-notch ]. Canadian breweries are often accepted by foreign brewers to reproduce their product rather than pay the shipping costs.Elsinore beer anyone?
Once we were eating at a Japanese restaurant, in the US.
Everyone started talking about how good the Japanese Kirin beer was. Then someone noticed on the bottle that it said 'Brewed in Canada by Molson under license'.
American beer (such as Bud, Cooors, etc) used to be the 'better' beer.
When large scale brewing was started, before long distance shipping was practical the beer landscape was very different. Creating 'tasteless' beers like Bud cost more than the more robust ales.
Then Prohibition came along and threw another wrench in the works. The history of brewing in America is quite interesting. A lot of factors caused it to be the way it is.
-dave
the new hipster beer here in new england is Narraganssett Lager, an old school beer my grandfather used to pound, real working class. only problem, tastes like gasoline... at least I can drink PBR
I know... Some fine microbrews have crossed my lips over recent years whilst visiting the US, but it's a Canadian rite of passage to cast aspersions on US beers.... :lookarounFin du Monde is wonderful. There's a whole "French Canadian" style emerging that is a bit Canadian, with a healthy helping of Belgian thrown in. I love those beers.
As for "American Beer Quality", well, there's lots of it these days. It was something to sneer at, but no longer--and you're selling yourself short if you aren't giving it a whirl.
This from a beer snob, homebrewer, AND a Canadian!
So, as with all of you, this makes me fully credentialed to have my own opinion, lol.:lol:
I learned something recently. We "sorta" have President Jimmy Carter to thank for the resurgence of quality American beer. Twas during his administration that they repealed the Prohibition laws regarding home brewing. Once quality ingredients started to get out to people, and they started brewing beer at home, they started opening micro-breweries for the first time in many decades.
The rest is sudsy history.
I'm in Minnesota right now, and if you haven't had a SURLY FURIOUS, you're really missing something--a whole new breed of IPA, crafted with my newly favorite SIMCOE hops. I saw someone reference Weyerbacher above, and I think they have a double simcoe IPA that I haven't been able to get my hands on--yet!
Oh--and my favorite spot to watch Illuminations is on the steps
in front of CANADA. (just to keep some WDW content in here!)
here's what i do.......take the magical express to downtown disney westside......there is a Hess gas station across the parking lot......they sell plenty of beer and I think they even have 12 packs available....and its 100% cheaper....They have 24oz bottles of Heineken....$2.50......disney hotel $5 for a 12oz(Heineken is what I drink when I cant get guinness draft). Make sure you take something to carry them back in, because all they have is plastic bags if you buy by the bottle. I had as many as I could carry in those stupid bags....got back on the bus.....and everyone is just staring at me.......at least 12 green heineken bottles 'clanging' around and sticking out of the top of the bags.....not sure if they were looking at me as the "Disney drunk" or thinking 'what a lucky man, I wish I had his beer'....saves me a ton of cash!
When you think of the hardest beer drinking countries in the world they all seem like pretty good candidates:
America, England, Germany, Canada, Ireland, Scotland, Australia?? The results are actually surprising:
20. Portugal 59.6
19. Canada 68.3
18. Poland 69.1
17. Hungary 75.3
16. New Zealand 77
15. Netherlands 79
14. Croatia 81.2
13. United States 81.6
12. Spain 83.8
11. Slovakia 84.1
10. Luxembourg 84.4
9. Finland 85
8. Denmark 89.9
7. Belgium 93
6. United Kingdom 99
5. Austria 108.3
4. Australia 109.9
3. Germany 115.8
2. Ireland 131.1
1. Czech Republic 156.9
Those are litres per capita (whatever a litre is).
For once I am ashamed of my country's apparent health consciousness in this category....we can do better, I know we can.....
We apparently drink beer as well as we play soccer.
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