Best beer


Kokanee gets my nod.
tmsorosk
The Breakfast Stout is definitely coffee like, if it is the same that I had before. I like the Porter but never had Backwoods Bastard so I will give that a try. Thanks for the recommendations.
I often find myself agreeing with Loomis J's music and audio posts, now I have to second his beer observations (except that I've enjoyed many a Pliny over the past couple of years). Do music, sound, and beer tastes correlate? Is Loomis a Burgundy and Borolo fan, too? Are entangled quantum systems at work here? Mysteries abound, I suppose.

I especially agree that Sam Adams is underrated, possibly because it's a big company these days. Their chocolate stout, in particular, is a great example of delivering excellence on a style that's often abused by smaller, more fashionable producers. I think Sam Adams generally does a great job of balancing hops bitterness and malt sweetness, something that seems to elude most of the more revered craft brewers IMO.

For those claiming home brews rule, I'd point out that one big difference is consistency. Like a restaurant vs a home cook, the restaurant needs to make its signature dishes taste the same each time. Even if it tastes good, variation from one meal to the next is a problem. It's very tough for most home brewers to achieve that consistency because precise temperature control is key, and the systems required to achieve that are too expensive for most home brewers.

Final note: If you find yourself in San Diego, check out White Labs. They are a commercial yeast supplier and they have a tasting room that features up to five examples of beers that are brewed identically, except for the yeast strain. AFAIK, it's the only place in the US (world?) where you can do such a controlled tasting. Kinda like finding an audio retailer with five identical turntables - except each is equipped with a different cartridge - feeding the same system. The rarest of A/B/C/D comparisons.
thanks, marty. since we're logrolling here, i agree with you wholeheartedly on the hop/malt balance thing--the trap i think many of these young gun microbrewers fall into is overamping the hops and/or alcohol to give their potions more "character"--the net effect is that they alienate a lot of potential acolytes, whose taste buds just aren't that acclimated to extremes--sorta like a green day fan being exposed to death metal. to which end, i just quaffed at gordon bierch--while i generally eschew all things franchised or cloned, i gotta say their beer is very good--it's accessible without being cloying. damn good brisket, too.
Anyone remember Andeker? Brewed by PBR from 1972 through the mid 80's. My favorite beer during the mid 70's. PBR's Michelob.. same price, but I though it was much better. Wish they'd bring it back.