James Ready 5.5 pack of 24 sounds real nice.johnjay said:so, it being the weekend and all, wanted to do a little poll. For those of you that do drink said beverage, what type is your favorite?
Yeeeeeh Canada! these brews as well.Dupeo said:Budweiser is gnat urine.
Give me some Sleeman or Granville Island brew. (Go Canada!)
I'd pay good money to watch someone attempt to sing the first bit while drunk.UnableToThinkOfName said:Alcopops, usually, because I'm an epic wimp who doesn't like bitter tastes. :/
I don't drink much though.
Also:
Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
They taste different, there are things I wouldn't call ale or lager like John Smiths, I'd just call that beer. There are a few things where I wouldn't call sub genres exactly the same as I'd call the over all genre.Megalodon said:Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
Megalodon said:Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
You're both British by your profiles. When beer is said here it usually means bitter, which is really just a type of beer.D4zZ said:They taste different, there are things I wouldn't call ale or lager like John Smiths, I'd just call that beer. There are a few things where I wouldn't call sub genres exactly the same as I'd call the over all genre.Megalodon said:Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
I also said I'm sat here with Carlsberg so if I made sense through typing I'd be quite happy.
Fair enough.D4zZ said:They taste different, there are things I wouldn't call ale or lager like John Smiths, I'd just call that beer. There are a few things where I wouldn't call sub genres exactly the same as I'd call the over all genre.Megalodon said:Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
I also said I'm sat here with Carlsberg so if I made sense through typing I'd be quite happy.
The chief difference between lager and ale is in the fermentation . Lagers are fermented for longer at lower temperatures than ales are. Taste-wise you are completely correct.Actual said:I don't know the real difference between lager and bitter, but to me lager is fizzy, bitter is not. Lager tastes tart and acidic, bitter tastes strong and full. And you can drink bitter at any temperature (though it's best slightly chilled) while lager can only be drank on the point of freezing or it tastes very bad.
John Smith's is bitter. Really, beer is the overall term, like wine. You have ale, which is the original stuff, then you have lagers, which use a different type of yeast, and have only been around recently (19th century onwards, roughly). Then there's bitters, which are like ales, but tend to be smoother and creamier. Then there are stouts, like Guinness. Incidentally, all of these should be served at different temperatures, and out of different mediums. Lagers go well ice cold from steel barrels (because really, lager is there because it's refreshing, not because it's a connoisseur's drink), bitters are served at cellar temperature, usually from steel (though the line between bitters and ales is very blurry, so there's often a lot of mixup), ales and stouts are at room temperature, and ales are preferably out of wooden casks. Cask ales also tend to use gravity flow to get them from cask to glass.D4zZ said:They taste different, there are things I wouldn't call ale or lager like John Smiths, I'd just call that beer. There are a few things where I wouldn't call sub genres exactly the same as I'd call the over all genre.Megalodon said:Didn't quite understand that, both lager and ale are types of beer. So saying you prefer lager or ale to beer doesn't make sense.D4zZ said:I choose lager then ale then beer.
I also said I'm sat here with Carlsberg so if I made sense through typing I'd be quite happy.