Re: Beer recommendations
Posted: Mon May 16, 2011 12:14 am
Im quite tempted to try this. But £35...
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
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32%jameshk wrote:Im quite tempted to try this. But £35...
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
Nope and I wouldn't your buying into a brand rather than a quality beer. Plus Scottish beer is shite, the further north you get the worse the beer seems to get. The southerners know how to make beer, they've been doing it far longer than a bunch of hipsters from Scotland who decieded to try and turn their beer into the beverage of Nathan Barley.jameshk wrote:Im quite tempted to try this. But £35...
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
I would usually agree with you about Scottish beer, they brew with fewer hops and I have always found their beers to be somewhat bland. However Brewdog is an exception (the post-modern tagline and the blurbs on the back of their bottles are very tongue-in-cheek btw) Brewdog are probably the most talented brewers in Britain at the moment, and don't just make novelty strength brews but are probably also the best at getting the most out of low abv. beers, their Edge mild at 2.7% being a prime example, just stunning.firky wrote: Nope and I wouldn't your buying into a brand rather than a quality beer. Plus Scottish beer is shite,
This is rubbish sorry. Of course it's personal taste, but for example you can't just dismiss say the whole of Yorkshire, probably the best brewing county in Englandfirky wrote:the further north you get the worse the beer seems to get. The southerners know how to make beer, they've been doing it far longer than a bunch of hipsters from Scotland who decieded to try and turn their beer into the beverage of Nathan Barley.
Again, the brewery is still independently owned, and from what I've read the two lads who run it just want to carry on making beer which is that little bit different. I will only concede to your argument once they have sold out to InBev for £3trillion or something.firky wrote:Why spend all that money on one bottle of beer when you can get a dozern good beers, beers that have remained the same for centuries because they're perfection? Beers that people make for the love of beer and not because they want to be rich. Seriously, get some Old Tom or some of the beers on this thread and do yourself a favour
firky wrote:Anyone had Fruli? It's Belgian fruit beer, doesn't taste of fruit or such (or beer really) but is really nice. Can only be described as um... fruit beer?! Anyway, only ever seen it on draught in Oxford though (Oxford is the bomb for good beer!), and never seen it in the supermarkets, even Waitrose or Selfridges.
(God! I love Selfridges food and wine hall... pity the prices are astronomical.)
seems like all of brew-dogs' high alcohol beers are just for competitive's sake rather than being a quality brew...firky wrote:Nope and I wouldn't your buying into a brand rather than a quality beer. Plus Scottish beer is shite, the further north you get the worse the beer seems to get. The southerners know how to make beer, they've been doing it far longer than a bunch of hipsters from Scotland who decieded to try and turn their beer into the beverage of Nathan Barley.jameshk wrote:Im quite tempted to try this. But £35...
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
Why spend all that money on one bottle of beer when you can get a dozern good beers, beers that have remained the same for centuries because they're perfection? Beers that people make for the love of beer and not because they want to be rich. Seriously, get some Old Tom or some of the beers on this thread and do yourself a favour
My brother had a 25ml measure of the Tactical Nuclear Penguin (32%) a couple of weeks ago and he said it was delicious. I trust his judgement on such matters.knell wrote:seems like all of brew-dogs' high alcohol beers are just for competitive's sake rather than being a quality brew...firky wrote:Nope and I wouldn't your buying into a brand rather than a quality beer. Plus Scottish beer is shite, the further north you get the worse the beer seems to get. The southerners know how to make beer, they've been doing it far longer than a bunch of hipsters from Scotland who decieded to try and turn their beer into the beverage of Nathan Barley.jameshk wrote:Im quite tempted to try this. But £35...
http://www.brewdog.com/tactical_nuclear_penguin
Anyone had it?
Why spend all that money on one bottle of beer when you can get a dozern good beers, beers that have remained the same for centuries because they're perfection? Beers that people make for the love of beer and not because they want to be rich. Seriously, get some Old Tom or some of the beers on this thread and do yourself a favour
i mean, just look at their squirrel carcass brew:
http://www.brewdog.com/blog-article/341
if that tastes awesome i'll eat my foot... but a 55% abv beer isn't really a beer imo
i'll have to try it out then! it'll be strange feeling, trying out a beer that gives rum/vodka abv a run for its moneybass_culture wrote:
My brother had a 25ml measure of the Tactical Nuclear Penguin (32%) a couple of weeks ago and he said it was delicious. I trust his judgement on such matters.
Yep, definitely a sipper! A good halfway house might be the Tokyo (18.2%) I had some of that a while ago and was suitably impressed!knell wrote:i'll have to try it out then! it'll be strange feeling, trying out a beer that gives rum/vodka abv a run for its moneybass_culture wrote:
My brother had a 25ml measure of the Tactical Nuclear Penguin (32%) a couple of weeks ago and he said it was delicious. I trust his judgement on such matters.
Balls. I'm not mad for Brew Dog - their basic stuff is alright if you like that kind of thing and I can't really be arsed with the novelty strong ones - but Black Isle Brewery is fantastic, Isle of Skye, Orkney Brewery, Caingorm Brewery and whatever that one at Kinlochleven is called all do good stuff too.firky wrote: Plus Scottish beer is shite, the further north you get the worse the beer seems to get. The southerners know how to make beer, they've been doing it far longer than a bunch of hipsters from Scotland who decieded to try and turn their beer into the beverage of Nathan Barley.
I have very strong opinions on beer. The Brewdog lot are just a bunch of idiots out to make some money from beer bottles with contemporary names and funky graphic design with a bit of pretentious branding. I've been to their trade stands, I've even had free samples sent to me! I wouldn't stock it in the pub, largely because the, what I call 'good beer', is the more traditional ales from down south, such as Speckled Hen etc.bass_culture wrote: Nothing personal btw, I just have strong views on beer, I can see you do too!
drokkr wrote:Dragon Stout and Fruli!!! - Have you been in my fridge Friky? We'll have to go on the piss sometime...
Sorry, but the thing about awards is utter rubbish. I mean for example, just look at the winners of CAMRAs Champion beer of Britain award since 2000, a pretty even split between North and South wouldn't you say?firky wrote:I have very strong opinions on beer. The Brewdog lot are just a bunch of idiots out to make some money from beer bottles with contemporary names and funky graphic design with a bit of pretentious branding. I've been to their trade stands, I've even had free samples sent to me! I wouldn't stock it in the pub, largely because the, what I call 'good beer', is the more traditional ales from down south, such as Speckled Hen etc.bass_culture wrote: Nothing personal btw, I just have strong views on beer, I can see you do too!
Oh and Yorkshire's beers aren't a patch on the ones in the South of England. Go to any CAMRA festival or beer festival, and you'll see how the beers from the south nearly always walk away with awards. There are good beers in the north but if you like crap like Worthingtons are Boddingtons, and even some of the shite that Jennings put out, then you've never had a good beer
Besides which, I am considerably older than most of you lot and everyone knows real taste comes with age
Agreed, using Old Speckled Hen as an example of 'proper beer' is like using Skrillex as an example of 'proper dubstep'. Greene King are the Tesco of the beer world.bass_culture wrote: I'll take a beautifully crafted pint of microbrewed Brew Dog any day over your (supposedly "real") mass produced Old Speckled Hen, which frankly tastes like piss these days anyway!
Right, yeah, Boddingtons is clearly what people are talking about rather than eg Dent Brewery or Kelham Island or Hawkshead Brewery or York Brewery or Black Sheep or Bradfield or Barngates or Moorhouses or Castle Rock... I( mean seriously, have you ever actually been outside the M25?firky wrote: Oh and Yorkshire's beers aren't a patch on the ones in the South of England. Go to any CAMRA festival or beer festival, and you'll see how the beers from the south nearly always walk away with awards. There are good beers in the north but if you like crap like Worthingtons are Boddingtons, and even some of the shite that Jennings put out, then you've never had a good beer