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Best beers for brahs?

It depends on who you ask. Most brewers consider mead a type of beer, but many mead makers (if they don't also make beer) consider it a type of wine. Really mead is just mead if you ask me.
 
If you ever visit Lithuania try lithuanian mead. ...Not even close to beer.. a little sip of this would make your insides burn:)

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https://www.madeinlithuania.lt/Expo...ldest_Drink_in_the_World_is_Made_in_Lithuania
 
Second batch of UGLI Baby IPA in the tank!

Beautiful day! Couldn't have asked for a better brew day.

Recipe: UGLI Baby 2
Brewer: Jared
Asst Brewer:
Style: Imperial IPA
TYPE: All Grain

Recipe Specifications
--------------------------
Boil Size: 13.00 gal
Post Boil Volume: 11.50 gal
Batch Size (fermenter): 11.00 gal
Bottling Volume: 10.50 gal
Estimated OG: 1.080 SG
Estimated Color: 6.6 SRM
Estimated IBU: 104.8 IBUs
Brewhouse Efficiency: 79.00 %
Est Mash Efficiency: 83.5 %
Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Ingredients:
------------
Amt Name Type # %/IBU
22 lbs Pale Malt, Maris Otter (3.0 SRM) Grain 1 78.6 %
1 lbs Acid Malt (3.0 SRM) Grain 2 3.6 %
1 lbs Caramel/Crystal Malt - 20L (20.0 SRM) Grain 3 3.6 %
3.00 oz Calypso [15.30 %] - First Wort 60.0 min Hop 4 68.8 IBUs
2.00 oz Amarillo Gold [8.20 %] - First Wort 60.0 Hop 5 24.6 IBUs
3 lbs Extra Light Dry Extract (3.0 SRM) Dry Extract 6 14.3 %
2.00 oz Cascade [6.60 %] - Boil 15.0 min Hop 7 8.1 IBUs
2.00 oz Cascade [6.60 %] - Boil 5.0 min Hop 8 3.3 IBUs
5.00 oz Cascade [7.70 %] - Aroma Steep 1.0 min Hop 9 0.0 IBUs
4.00 oz Amarillo Gold [8.20 %] - Aroma Steep 1.0 Hop 10 0.0 IBUs
1.0 pkg American Ale (Wyeast Labs #1056) [124.21 Yeast 11 -


Mash Schedule: Single Infusion, Light Body, No Mash Out
Total Grain Weight: 28 lbs
----------------------------
Name Description Step Temperat Step Time
Mash In Add 24.00 qt of water at 169.7 F 150.0 F 75 min
Sparge: Fly sparge with 9.88 gal water at 168.0 F
 
At what point do you folks consider a beer "dark?"

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Truly honored!!!

How's it taste??


£¥£

I expect great things.

The first batch (completed about 9 days after my ban) was fantastic. I mentioned it in another thread but it was by far the best IPA I've ever made. I taste tested it against Squatters Hop Rising and Uinta Detour Double IPA and it was remarkably close to Hop Rising. I didn't set out to make a clone but if I had I couldn't have done much better. Of course, with the second batch I expect it to be even better.
 
Some Asian Beer That's good:

Chinese:

tsingtao-beer.jpg


Japanese:

asahi-super-dry-beer-bottle.jpg


Beer_42.jpg


and Korean:

All-Beer.jpg


OB, Max, Hite and Cass, Cass is the best of the koreans for my money. Xingtao is my favorite followed by Sapporo. All taste srsly good with fried mother ****ing chicken

I wonder if anybody has tried any of these... I doubt it.
 

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Some Asian Beer That's good:

Chinese:

tsingtao-beer.jpg


My favorite

Japanese:

asahi-super-dry-beer-bottle.jpg


Beer_42.jpg


I think Sapporo is better.

and Korean:

All-Beer.jpg


OB, Max, Hite and Cass, Cass is the best for my money. They're all pretty terrible overall

I wonder if anybody has tried any of these... I doubt it.

Of your first 3 I've had all of them. I deployed out of San Diego... Those were not hard beers to find. I haven't had any of the others you mentioned. Tiger beer seemed to be everywhere.

WeekendDec21_tiger-beer's-festive-party_cover_655x380.jpg


All in all these are all light American lagers.
 
Some Asian Beer That's good:

Chinese:

tsingtao-beer.jpg


Japanese:

asahi-super-dry-beer-bottle.jpg


Beer_42.jpg


and Korean:

All-Beer.jpg


OB, Max, Hite and Cass, Cass is the best of the koreans for my money. Xingtao is my favorite followed by Sapporo. All taste srsly good with fried mother ****ing chicken

I wonder if anybody has tried any of these... I doubt it.

I have tried all of them. There are a lot of korean markets that sell asian beers in southern cali. Hite is my favorite. They are terrible quality tho. they are cheap and light
 
I have tried all of them. There are a lot of korean markets that sell asian beers in southern cali. Hite is my favorite. They are terrible quality tho. they are cheap and light

Oh yeah, I forgot to mention that they're actually all really bad. Tsingtao is just the best among those posted, and beer, in general, tastes good with fried chicken.
 
I tried most of them asian beers - My favorite is Saporo. Rest is nothing special.
 
To what purpose are hops used in brewing beer? Could you leave the hops out?
 
To what purpose are hops used in brewing beer? Could you leave the hops out?

Beer is made from sugary wort that the yeast convert to alcohol and CO2. But some of the sugar is unfermentable and remains in the beer after fermentation is complete. Hops are used to add bitterness to balance the residual sugar so that beer is not cloyingly sweet. But Hops also have antiseptic properties. Before hops were used breweries had proprietary mixtures of herbs, called gruit, for the same purpose.

But hops can also provide a distinctive flavor and aroma. In general, hops added with more than 30 minutes left in the boil are considered bittering hops (it takes time to extract the alpha acids), but due to the volatile nature of hop flavor and aroma you lose all of those qualities the longer the hops are boiled so late hop additions are used as well.
 
Thanks GF. Interesting topic.
 
Just bought these three beers from the Utah beer Co-op! That store is great high percentage beer not from a liquor store and they do on tap growlers.

The black'o'latern is better than the regular pumpkin beers. Its a dark beer with a hint of pumpkin, not the overwhelming artificial pumpkin taste.
the Ghost rider is my favorite IPA now. I dont really like IPA's that much but this one is really good. It does not have the bitter hoppy after taste.
The Wee Peet is a hoppy bitter taste to start and a sweet after taste, goes great with something sweet.

View attachment 3783
 
Thanks GF. Interesting topic.

Hops are pretty amazing and there are new varietals being produced every season nowadays. Unfortunately many of the new varietals are patented which keeps the supply severely limited and the prices high. Amarillo (or should I say VGXP01 c.v.) is one of my favorite hops, but can be hard to get and is twice as expensive as many other types. Unfortunately, UGLI Baby IPA can't be made without it.

Once hops started being used they were quickly used to the exclusion of previously used gruit. They are just THAT GOOD when it comes to what they do for beer. Gruit beer is still available, although I'd say it's more for novelty and history than anything else.

But the new hops being produced are bringing more and more flavors to the table. Traditional hops are typically described as earthy or floral. New hops are citrus, melon, fruit, berries, pine, grass. There are some new hops said (I haven't experimented with them) to produce a strawberry flavor, some that produce watermelon. Some of the most coveted hops are real love 'em or hate 'em types, like Simcoe, which some describe lovingly as having a piney, resiny aroma and other describe as straight cat piss.

Hops are only one of many reasons I think beer is a far more sophisticated beverage than wine. Hard for many to get the beer guzzling frat boy or trailer park dwelling alcoholic stereotypes disassociated from what beer is becoming, but the fact is that good wine is the product of good grapes and good beer is the product of a good brewer. There are many beer/wine makers and former wine makers at homebrewtalk.com, and the story is always the same. Making good beer requires much more skill and creativity than making good wine.
 
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