Beer thread
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@Bovidae said in Beer thread:
Has anyone tried these? These beers might now be collectors items and hard to find (or out of stock).
Yep, decent drops.
I'm on a Craft beer FB page and whilst I do agree that Trump is a colossal dickhead I don't need reminding of it every five minutes by people posting updates of them drinking it.
My mate has a bunch of them, Behemoth do some brilliant drops.
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@Crucial said in Beer thread:
@dogmeat said in Beer thread:
@Crucial Their website says they still brew themselves from their pub in Mt Eden??
After a successful crowdfunding campaign in 2019, Behemoth moved into their "forever home". With the help of 635 Chur-holders, a brewpub (Churly's) & production brewery now sit on the corner of Dominion Road and Charles Street. With 24 taps there's plenty of space for trying our most recent brew!
Interesting. I'm not sure if that brewery is doing the tap fresh stuff only or their whole supply. I was told only recently by someone in their production chain that the cans come from elsewhere.
I possibly have it all wrong. Depends on size of the brewery I guess.I suspect there are very few "craft breweries" doing all of their own production nowadays... there's a shitload of contract breweries around the place. And yeah - if it's in a can... that's the shit easily outsourced.
I noted with some amusement at a little restaurant in Opunake, they listed some beer on their blackboard as being from Napier - when it was in fact a brand well-known as being Auckland or Northland or something... and when I checked the can, sure enough - the address listed on the can was that of a certain contract-brewer in Ahuriri, Napier. -
Johnnie Walker Double Black.
Really nice - has a fair bit of character. Normal go for Single Malts (had a Green Label blended recently which I kinda liked) but this is very drinkable.
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@Victor-Meldrew I keep promising myself to try and get into blends. Would the Double Black be a good starting point?
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@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Victor-Meldrew I keep promising myself to try and get into blends. Would the Double Black be a good starting point?
Yeah, it's smoky and peaty, very smooth and has a fair bit of character. Someone once told me blended whisky get a bad reputation as most cheap whisky is blended, but to try a decent blend. Think I prefer this to JW Green Label which is blend of 15 yr-old malts. More memorable.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Victor-Meldrew I keep promising myself to try and get into blends. Would the Double Black be a good starting point?
Yeah, it's smoky and peaty, very smooth and has a fair bit of character. Someone once told me blended whisky get a bad reputation as most cheap whisky is blended, but to try a decent blend. Think I prefer this to JW Green Label which is blend of 15 yr-old malts. More memorable.
Hints of Islay? My old man's a big Chivas fan, so that's the prescribed nightcap whenever I manage to get down.
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@Victor-Meldrew @pakman Not going to be my go to then. I enjoy the odd Lagavulin but find Laphroaig a bit too much.
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@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Victor-Meldrew @pakman Not going to be my go to then. I enjoy the odd Lagavulin but find Laphroaig a bit too much.
How do you drink it? I just add a bottle top of water.
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@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Victor-Meldrew @pakman Not going to be my go to then.
Try JW Green Label - way less peaty but damned good.
I enjoy the odd Lagavulin but find Laphroaig a bit too much.
Lagavulin is like Listerine on steroids. Got absolutely rat-arsed on the stuff a few years back. Still shudder.
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@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@pakman likewise
Neat, generally for me.
Going to give this a try at some stage. My whisky-loving mate from Peebles recommended it to me.
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@Victor-Meldrew I'm not so sure about these niche spirit producers to be honest. I get the feeling that they're trying too hard to be a bit different and edgy (based on no knowledge whatsoever of your friend's recommendation). I have several specialist gins at Cato Towers and whilst I enjoy the odd glass here and there I tend to find the second glass less appealing by some way to the first in most cases. Having said that I have enjoyed a Japanese whisky named Reiko (also do a gin, but I've not tried that).
I have come to realise that I am a classicist when it comes to getting on the piss. I enjoy proper English bitter beer, none of that craft bollocks. Strong continental lager. Claret and Burgundy as a rare change. Cognac. Scotch whisky and standard English gin.
And on the cognac front, if you can source some you MUST try Tesseron. The Lot 53 is sublime, but I have just indulged myself in a bottle of the Lot 29 - not tried it yet.
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@Catogrande Bombay Sapphire?
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@Catogrande said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
I have come to realise that I am a classicist when it comes to getting on the piss. I enjoy proper English bitter beer, none of that craft bollocks. Strong continental lager. Claret and Burgundy as a rare change. Cognac. Scotch whisky and standard English gin.
Pretty much the same here, except I'm not a big beer drinker. Love good New World Pinots and slowly preferring well-aged Oz Shiraz to Bordeaux (I have a few bottles of 2000 Birchwood McLaren Vale which is the stuff of angels) A few restaurants around here sell local cider which is absolutely top rate and not the rustic stuff you'd expect.
Mrs M's the gin drinker and she'd agree with you there. Likes to try the craft gins but always goes back to the classics after a glass or two.
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Massive craft beer piston-wristed gibbon here.
Cannot get enough IPAs, West Coast IPAs, Hazy IPAs, New England IPAs (NEIPAs) and then the double/imperial versions of those. Big flavours, big ABV, love it.
Also love my whiskys, bourbons and gins.
Got these two bottles as gifts last week for a great mate who turned 70. The Starward is an Aussie from Melbourne. Really enjoyed it but not quite as good as those Aussies from Tassie.
The gin was just superb, we both loved it and will have to get this again.
A recent tasting with mates between Xmas and New Years turned up a great collection of beers. We said bring two of 3 different beers and we split the two between the 3 of us. We also had a 2l growler during the same tasting.
And this long weekends line up goes something like this...
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@RoninWC mate that's aweomse. If you know what you love, go for it.
My wife and I are a bit the same. Our new years resolution a few years ago was 2 new beers a week for a year. Tasted a whole lot of crazy stuff, and generally enjoyed it. However, it really clarified that the stuff we love is hop forward - so hazies, IPA, IIPA and hoppy pilsners primarily.
Great stuff