Re: Guinness rules.

Obviously you have not taken the time to acquire the taste of such a perfect

> beer as Guinness, or you have no taste. From the language in your post, I > am thinking the latter is true.

While I suspect the OP can't handle anything more flavorful than Bud. Guinness - at least the standard version that's on draught throughout the States, and in the nitro cans - is far from a perfect beer. Unless by "perfect" you mean "overrated."

I can think of dozens of stouts I'd rather drink before Guinness.

-Steve

Reply to
Steve Jackson
Loading thread data ...

McAuslan Oatmeal Stout... mmmmm.....

Richard

Reply to
Richard

Whereabouts does one have to be to find it in stores, or better yet, bars?

Richard

Reply to
Richard

It was all over southern Oregon until I left. half liter bottles and on tap. Have to look in the collection. OK, made in Fort Bragg California.

8.9%. kept a millennium bottle. northcoast brewing is listed as the source.

To me, it is what a stout otta be. stout.

Reply to
Kegwasher

Same here.

Reply to
Kenji

That is an excellent oatmeal stout, second only to Mercury Brewing's Ipswich stout in my book.

Reply to
Kenji

Bell's Expedition Stout Coopers Best Extra Sammy Smith Oatmeal Sammy Smith Imperial Old Rasputin Russian Imperial Stone Imperial Rogue Shakespeare

.........just a few that are a hell of a lot better, but Guinness isn't all that bad.......just lacks complexity unlike Expedition.....mmmmmm tasty............

Reply to
Strangleholder

Probably not going to find it in too many bars (although I've seen it at a couple places here in southern California). It's brewed by North Coast, so anywhere they distribute you should be able to find it. And they distribute in a lot of states.

-STeve

Reply to
Steve Jackson

"RadioResearch .com>" I've had Guinness in Ireland, and it tastes 100% better than the stuff

It's the exact same beer. Same recipe, same brewery.

Different recipes and different breweries for England and some parts of the Continent. English Guinness sucks.

It could have tasted better over there because it was fresher, although Guinness move enough product in the States now to make it worth their while to get stuff over here in pretty good shape. And people are often susceptible to attaching the taste of something to the fond memories of consuming it in a foreign land in an exotic setting, making it seem to taste "better." Certainly a likely suspect regarding Irish Guinness being "better," since it's the exact same beer.

Nope.

Possible. Guinness have several breweries throughout the world, and they brew different recipes in various regions. I used to think that they kept pretty good control over quality, whether it's their own breweries or contractors. I was proved wrong by the abomination that comes out of Labbat in Canada with the label Guinness Extra Stout. Used to be a wonderful beer. Used to be.

Usually there will be label saying where it's brewed and packaged.

-Steve

Reply to
Steve Jackson

You got that right. I'm in the process of converting a macro beer drinker to a micro beer drinker. He's had draught Guinness before and I was impressed because he wasn't impressed with it.

I got him some Obsidian(Deschutes) and Zonker(Snake River) and them...he liked! Btw, we had a BBQ at his house the other day and he also got to sample some Brooklyn Lager, Victory Pils & HopDevil, & Deschutes Cascade Ale. It's good to be my friend! LOL!

Best regards, Bill

Reply to
Bill Becker

Nigerian Guinness Foreign Extra Stout is held by some beergeeks to be a very GOOD beer. It is apparently available fairly readily in some European markets to satisfy expat demands. It is brewed with sorghum b/c the Nigerians apparently require that malt beverages consumed there be made of local grains.

Recently discussed on RateBeer--

formatting link

its ratings--

formatting link
432

--NPD

Reply to
nicholas peter dempsey

Guinness Stout...and all of its regional variations (check out this list:

formatting link
are decent examples of dry stout-but not, collectively, paradigmatic of the style. It is somewhat unique in its use of a lactic acid process similar to Jack Daniel's sour mash technique.

Old Rasputin (an Imperial Stout) is wonderful, but it's apples to Guinness' oranges.

North Coast does offer a tasty & accessible entry in this style called "Old No. 38", which is perennially my personal favorite.

The Beverage Tasting Institute has some excellent notes on this style (and many others) in its web journal, and is generally a very useful reference tool:

formatting link

Mike

Decadent Beer Guy

P.S. It seems to me that, for the most part, beverage quality is >

Reply to
Michael Hoopes

What a load of old horseshit that is. Guinness is inescapably paradigmatic of the style (check your fooking dictionary, bub), and the "lactic acid process" has nothing to do with the sour mash "technique" that is employed by every American whiskey distiller (not just Jack Daniel's).

And there's a fair amount of old horseshit here, too.

Reply to
Gunther Prien

Lactic acid ? Guinness is no Berliner Weisse ! Guinness Foreign Extra Stout is produced by mixing young beer with bee that has been aged and therefore has a sightly sour edge, but it is the one and only version of Guinness that's anything near containing lactic acid...

Reply to
The Submarine Captain

"Disappointed American Light Lager Drinker" schreef in bericht news:R_uSa.27504

There's no Guinness anywhere anymore where finings are added, so the veggies have no point anymore. Joris

Reply to
Joris Pattyn

No, more like the lactic quality in the rare Wisconsin beer style, Sour Cream Ale. Although there is some horseshit character in Lieftimmer Vue's Prune Lambeeq.

That's the rumor, but the truth is that Guinness refused to pay me the full amount for this slogan, and so my lawyer has to kill their lawyers. In spite, I use this phrase as often as I can, just to wave it under their snotty noses and remind them what a brilliant slogan they passed up on for being cheap.

Reply to
Gunther Prien

Cool! Win-win for both sides! Can you come up with more slogans?

Yeah, but in the meantime, lawyer-snot all over your slogan. Icky.

Reply to
Oh, Guess

Yup, it's all filtered and pasteurised nowadays, even on the Irish market, so no more isinglass.

Reply to
The Submarine Captain

Black Hart, also by North Coast, is an accessible and fairly tasty stout.

Reply to
Kenji

Interesting that the BTI would feature style information when the beer evaluations they do are strictly hedonic and have nothing to do with stylistic parameters.

-- Joel Plutchak Boneyard Union of Zymurgical Zealots

"Resorting to personal harassment is a tactic of desperation."

Reply to
plutchak joel peter

DrinksForum website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.