Beer thread
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@taniwharugby said in Beer thread:
@mn5 beer from a 750ml bottle is far superior to thier canned or 330ml cousins!
Same shit just more of it.
750ml bottles are exciting in your late teens and early 20s though.
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@gt12 said in Beer thread:
I bet we all have a photo like that.
How good does that beer look too? That is a VB, or a Carlton Draught, or a Lion Red or a DB. Heck, maybe it's a fucking Rheineck.
Either way, it's cold, sub-4.5% alcohol, and that bloke is about to enjoy 15 of them.
Lion Brown or Bavarian Bitter at ours (not anymore, thank god).
My old man drank Lion Brown too, so that's what I was offered when I was young. I have never been a fan of Waikato Draught.
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@mn5 said in Beer thread:
@taniwharugby said in Beer thread:
@mn5 beer from a 750ml bottle is far superior to thier canned or 330ml cousins!
Same shit just more of it.
750ml bottles are exciting in your late teens and early 20s though.
500 ml bottles of Heartland are nice.
One of the things I really like about Japan, especially as I can buy one on my way home and drink it while walking down the street.
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@gt12 said in Beer thread:
@mn5 said in Beer thread:
@taniwharugby said in Beer thread:
@mn5 beer from a 750ml bottle is far superior to thier canned or 330ml cousins!
Same shit just more of it.
750ml bottles are exciting in your late teens and early 20s though.
500 ml bottles of Heartland are nice.
One of the things I really like about Japan, especially as I can buy one on my way home and drink it while walking down the street.
Yeah I did that in London with cans of Red Stripe back in the day
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@gt12 ha I used to work in an off-licence in the UK part time, and used to amaze me the number of people would get off the bus, come in, grab a can or 2 to drink while walking home...
2 dudes had returned form a football match that thier team had won, so bought a bottle of veuve clicquot (wasnt the cheap one either) and drank it straight form the bottle as they wandered home!
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@gt12 You can do that in NZ - as long as you don't mind some strange looks.
Always remember when I started living in Netherlands being told how great it was coz you could piss in the street
Although I did discover the Politie weren't keen on you doing it on their nice leather coats.
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@dogmeat said in Beer thread:
@gt12 You can do that in NZ - as long as you don't mind some strange looks.
Always remember when I started living in Netherlands being told how great it was coz you could piss in the street
Although I did discover the Politie weren't keen on you doing it on their nice leather coats.
Yeah it's generally only CBDs that have booze bans, and beaches!
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@machpants said in Beer thread:
Cheaper British beer!
Be careful what you wish for.
I am a huge fan of the best british beer. They have cask conditioned ales that are just awesome. But these aren't what we will get. The same ales when put in a bottle are mostly meh! (I would welcome the odd Fullers ESB or Youngs Spesh every now and then though and this could make them easier to get)
Their 'craft beer' generally is no better than the dozens of options we already have. I can see our supermarkets flooded with the incredibly average range from Brewdog (which are in the same realm as Macs or Monteiths IMO)
There are, of course, some places pushing boundaries especially around wild yeasts and I would be happy to see them on our shelves as something different. If we get the core range stuff from Wild Beer Company we may get some of their more interesting stuff on the side. -
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@delicatessen said in Beer thread:
@machpants said in Beer thread:
Cheaper British beer!
Hopefully it'll bring scotch prices down too
I doubt it. Unless an importer and distributor thinks they will sell more at slightly lower prices the price points won't change.
Ideally someone would look to undercut the current set up and drive prices down. -
@crucial said in Beer thread:
Brewdog
22% owned by a private equity company since 2017. Their poorer IPAs (Punk IPA, not nice) are stocked in convenience stores in China, alongside InBev's Goose Island (not good). The "Dead Pony" (name?) light ale is probably still good.
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@tim said in Beer thread:
@crucial said in Beer thread:
Brewdog
22% owned by a private equity company since 2017. Their poorer IPAs (Punk IPA, not nice) are stocked in convenience stores in China, alongside InBev's Goose Island (not good). The "Dead Pony" (name?) light ale is probably still good.
They served a great purpose as a market disruptor in the UK which is why they went big quick with public offferings. Every corner Tescos or Sainsburys stocks them.
I don't think they set out to do it that way but saw a business model opening as the big retailers wanted to fill a 'craft beer' space on the shelves.
As a pub option at places that only work off kegs they are often the best choice (when your other choices are Peroni etc) and Punk isn't that bad fresh off the tap.
Beavertown are following a similar path.Yeastie Boys are also pretty much a UK brand now and getting distribution in supermarkets like Waitrose is a huge win for them. Credit to them that they keep an 'adventurous' arm going with some experimental stuff and a network of independent pubs that distribute these one-offs.
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Lager-brewing yeasts in the era of modern genetics
The yeast Saccharomyces pastorianus is responsible for the annual worldwide production of almost 200 billion liters of lager-type beer. S. pastorianus is a hybrid of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces eubayanus that has been studied for well over a century. Scientific interest in S. pastorianus intensified upon the discovery, in 2011, of its S. eubayanus ancestor. Moreover, advances in whole-genome sequencing and genome editing now enable deeper exploration of the complex hybrid and aneuploid genome architectures of S. pastorianus strains. These developments not only provide novel insights into the emergence and domestication of S. pastorianus but also generate new opportunities for its industrial application. This review paper combines historical, technical and socioeconomic perspectives to analyze the evolutionary origin and genetics of S. pastorianus. In addition, it provides an overview of available methods for industrial strain improvement and an outlook on future industrial application of lager-brewing yeasts. Particular attention is given to the ongoing debate on whether current S. pastorianus originates from a single or multiple hybridization events and to the potential role of genome editing in developing industrial brewing yeast strains.
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Okay, so lockdowns (here in Sydney/NSW at least) are no longer a thing. But all through the 14 week lockdown I kept thinking about starting to home brew.
Spoke to some friends including my boss who home brew and eventually put together a bit of a plan. To preface this, I live in an apartment and therefore space, smells and mess are very much a consideration especially if I want to maintain a happy wife and therefore, happy life.
So ultimately, based on some suggestions and lots of homework, I chose the BrewArt BeerDroid. A fully temperature controlled automated fermenter that quite frankly, just looks cool
This is the Beer Droid...
With BrewArt, you can brew using their pre-packaged BrewPrints or their pre-packaged ingredients to come up with your own receipes, or clones of well known beers, or fresh wort kits, or even doing your own mash or seep and then adding to the Droid.
Starting with baby steps, I've got my first brew down using the Narci-Citrus IPA BrewPrint. Now 6 days in and there should be another 2 to 4 days left of fermentation, then will dry hop, 48 hours in dry hop mode before it will move into a 24 hr cold crash to help with clarity and then finally warms up to kegging temperature. If at any time I want to, I can alter the times to dry hop or cold crash or kegging temp.
Going to double the amount of dry hops based on reviews of this particular brew print, 40 grams each of Citra and Galaxy hops which should give it a good hoppy taste which I prefer.
One drawback to home brewing is waiting the 4-6 weeks of secondary fermentation/maturation. Hence why my plan is to put 4 litres into my iKegger (in the picture next to the Droid) and force carbonate with CO2. 6 litres will then go into 750 ml PET (BPA free) bottles and will use supplied Carbonation Drops.
Cannot wait to have my first taste.
Have already gone out and purchased a fresh wort kit to make a New England IPA (NEIPA), one of my favourite styles of craft beer as well as extra hops and dextrose to give it some punch
Cheers
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@roninwc welcome into the rabbit hole.
Looks a nice bit of kit. I went the other way, started big, with 100L brews. Scaled back since, but dropped an 80L pilsner brew last weekend.
Good fun, best hobby in the world. Enjoy it, but manage your consumption and keep the exercise up. First year i had beer on tap, I put on 10kg. Not complaining, just observing ... it's awesome but high alcohol beers are scary full of empty calories.
Well, empty but for taste.
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Behemoth Brewing - Half Way Down Lager (Japanese rice style)
Quite nice for a change. "Clean" style, perhaps a little on the soda side.
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@roninwc said in Beer thread:
Okay, so lockdowns (here in Sydney/NSW at least) are no longer a thing. But all through the 14 week lockdown I kept thinking about starting to home brew.
Spoke to some friends including my boss who home brew and eventually put together a bit of a plan. To preface this, I live in an apartment and therefore space, smells and mess are very much a consideration especially if I want to maintain a happy wife and therefore, happy life.
So ultimately, based on some suggestions and lots of homework, I chose the BrewArt BeerDroid. A fully temperature controlled automated fermenter that quite frankly, just looks cool
This is the Beer Droid...
With BrewArt, you can brew using their pre-packaged BrewPrints or their pre-packaged ingredients to come up with your own receipes, or clones of well known beers, or fresh wort kits, or even doing your own mash or seep and then adding to the Droid.
Starting with baby steps, I've got my first brew down using the Narci-Citrus IPA BrewPrint. Now 6 days in and there should be another 2 to 4 days left of fermentation, then will dry hop, 48 hours in dry hop mode before it will move into a 24 hr cold crash to help with clarity and then finally warms up to kegging temperature. If at any time I want to, I can alter the times to dry hop or cold crash or kegging temp.
Going to double the amount of dry hops based on reviews of this particular brew print, 40 grams each of Citra and Galaxy hops which should give it a good hoppy taste which I prefer.
One drawback to home brewing is waiting the 4-6 weeks of secondary fermentation/maturation. Hence why my plan is to put 4 litres into my iKegger (in the picture next to the Droid) and force carbonate with CO2. 6 litres will then go into 750 ml PET (BPA free) bottles and will use supplied Carbonation Drops.
Cannot wait to have my first taste.
Have already gone out and purchased a fresh wort kit to make a New England IPA (NEIPA), one of my favourite styles of craft beer as well as extra hops and dextrose to give it some punch
Cheers
That looks fool proof enough that even I couldn’t fuck it up.
Will send this to the woman as a gift idea for Xmas.