Favorite Pilsners?
#31
Posted 21 June 2006 - 10:39 AM
But, I've never choked down another bottle. The only other beer I routinely turn down in chile beer. That stuff is atrocious.
#32
Posted 21 June 2006 - 11:49 AM
Humboldt Brewing makes a hemp ale which I've never tried. I used to like their Red Nectar, but, haven't had it for a couple years now. Hmmmm... It appears they were acquired last year by Firestone-Walker.Skunked beer smelling like weed..Dunno but have you ever tried hemp/marajuana beer? I tried some in Copenhagen..not bad at all.
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I don't mean the sort of nice resinous smell of decent weed, (which I do not recommend to children and have only ever experienced second hand, of course,) but the nasty smell of someone who has been smoking particularly awful ditch weed. Kind of grassy, bitter-ish and decidedly skunky.
#33
Posted 21 June 2006 - 12:01 PM
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#34
Posted 21 June 2006 - 12:22 PM
I am such a fucking moron.
Edited by Sneakeater, 21 June 2006 - 12:23 PM.
#35
Posted 21 June 2006 - 12:24 PM
I have really good memories of drinking this beer in London years ago, but, when I've tried it recently it's underwhelmed me. Maybe it's just the things taste better on vacation phenomenon.I like Budweiser Budvar (Czechvar) a lot.
Has anyone tried Trumer Pils? They've done some sort of partnership with a brewery in Berkeley and are brewing it here, now. Any good?
#36
Posted 21 June 2006 - 01:07 PM
OK- I'm back. Some good places to start may be the BJCP Study Guide, just scroll down for the hops and yeast sections, and the Wyeast Product List. Wyeast is not the only place a brewer may get their supplies, but there is some good info on that page.Thanks Tongo,
Interesting read. I would like to know more about the different yeast and hops characteristics(how nerdy am I); if you know of any reading sources please could you post?
Regards Will
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We apparantly have a lot of skunks here in the Northeast, because I have smelled that odor quite a few times in my lifetime, usually as a result of driving through an area where a car has turned one into an ex-skunk. The resemblance to that quality in a light-struck beer is uncanny (and no, it doesn't really smell like Otto's jacket
jsolomon
Sadly that may be a common malady.Tongo, a thousand apologies. I blame too much work and not enough beer.
My gut tells me that the Hazed and Infused that you had was not the good stuff. I've had it before and it definitely isn't a shit beer. Quite hoppy, too.
Chi mangia bene, vive bene!
"...And bring us the finest food you've got, stuffed with the second finest."
"Excellent, sir. Lobster stuffed with tacos."
#37
Posted 21 June 2006 - 01:09 PM
I have really good memories of drinking this beer in London years ago, but, when I've tried it recently it's underwhelmed me. Maybe it's just the things taste better on vacation phenomenon.I like Budweiser Budvar (Czechvar) a lot.
Like any Pilsner, it tastes really good with very spicy food or on a really hot day.
Co-Founder, The Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
offthebroiler.com - Food Blog | My Flickr photo stream
#38
Posted 22 June 2006 - 07:47 AM
#39
Posted 22 June 2006 - 12:11 PM
Troegs Sunshine Pils is quite tasty, maybe because it's closer to pale ale than pilsener
I agree, Sunshine Pils might not taste like a classic German Pilsner, but I don't think it tastes like a Pale Ale. To me, it clearly tastes like a lager but its unusual fruity esters bend the category.
Edited by BrentKulman, 22 June 2006 - 12:13 PM.
#40
Posted 27 June 2006 - 10:45 AM
It's lighter in body than most other Pilseners I've tried. Definitely got that grassy, herbaceous hop thing going on. I didn't detect much skunkiness, as I understand it. But, they nicely bottle in brown.
A refreshing beer that I might drink on tap on a hot, humid day. Beats the heck out of Pabst or Budweiser (US). Don't think I'd buy a six pack again, as there are much more interesting beers around for less cash.
#41
Posted 28 June 2006 - 06:13 AM
"What you might call skunked due to lack of knowledge could be a tasty German-style Pils to another."
But, I dunno about that statement, though. Perhaps it's just the condescending attitude, though.
I agree with your problem with the article's "attitude" -I was actually looking for a different article which I *thought* was by beer writer Lew Bryson which was the best, in-depth article on light-stuck beer I'd seen but couldn't find it after a quick Google, so the Beer Advocate article was an easy (yet difficult) default. The facts are there but I, too, don't care for some of BA's methods.
I *will* say that "skunked" is a term that is often mis-used to mean any off-taste in a beer, often attributing it to age- beer that's past it's "best by" date- or mis-handled. True "skunking" can occur with minutes- ever have a nice hoppy ale in a glass, outdoors on a sunny day? Doesn't much matter if it came out of a brown bottle, aluminum can or keg, or from the brewery the day before, it can get lightstrunk that quick.
I'll try to find some interesting things for you, Bill. I've got a shelf full of books, but there are bound to be some great recources on line.Thanks Tongo,
Interesting read. I would like to know more about the different yeast and hops characteristics(how nerdy am I); if you know of any reading sources please could you post?
Regards Will
jesskidden- That Lew Bryson article you were refering to may be this one- How to Ruin a Good Beer. It's excellent, and I've got it bookmarked as a matter of fact. In addition to the lightstruck section, check out what he writes about heat and DMS- many continental lagers will contain trace amounts of it and with overheating it will become much more prominent. That can explain why some of these beers in an enclosed case will also give off a cabbagey aroma though they have not been exposed to light.
I like BA- I've met some very nice folks through that site, and it can be a great resource for finding stuff. The brusqueness is just Todd's style, and it can take a while to get used to though, but it'll happen.
I'll just add that I too really like Victory Prima Pils and Tupper's Hop Pocket Pils.
Lew Bryson is a member of the eG Society, though he hasn't posted anything for quite a while. Perhaps he will contribute to this interesting discussion.
When I was at the Santa Rampage in Chicago a couple of years ago, we had Hazed and Infused to drink. I don't know whether the particular bottle I had was maltreated, or whether it's just shit beer.
But, I've never choked down another bottle. The only other beer I routinely turn down in chile beer. That stuff is atrocious.
I've gotten three or four of those bad bottles of Hazed and Infused. They were terrible. However, when it's good, it is very very good!
#42
Posted 06 June 2007 - 08:55 PM
#43
Posted 07 June 2007 - 01:45 AM
#44
Posted 07 June 2007 - 11:21 AM
Moonlight Brewing makes its Reality Czeck. It's really a very, very good lager for a micro-brew. If you're on the San Francisco area, and see it on tap, I'd definitely recommend it.
A few of the mid-size breweries, like Biersch and Sudwerk, bottle them. Haven't tried to comment on their quality.
#45
Posted 10 June 2007 - 09:01 AM
I'm not often in the mood for a (possibly floral/grassy) clean tasting beer with a crisp/short finish unless I'm either extremely thirsty or eating food that I don't want to overwhelm.
Edited by Malkavian, 10 June 2007 - 09:02 AM.
#46
Posted 26 June 2007 - 06:35 PM
That's all.
Other pilseners are good, but once you have this beer, all others seem to be reaching for what this achieves: the pure, clean expression of malt discussed upthread, the crisp, refreshing flavor so generically co-opted as a marketing term, and the bitter, hoppy backbone that allows the beer to be drinkable sip after sip, glass after glass, ad infinitum.
I tend toward ales, generally, but Weihenstephaner is a life-changer.
#47
Posted 27 June 2007 - 01:37 AM
#48
Posted 27 June 2007 - 07:02 AM
But Berliner Kindl Weiss (yes, it's also available here if you look hard enough) is hardly a pilsner.
Christopher
Edited by plattetude, 27 June 2007 - 07:04 AM.
#49
Posted 27 June 2007 - 08:02 AM
The story I had back in the early 90's was that, when things changed hands, the Lao got lucky and the boys from Pils Urquell came in from the Eastern Block to look after things. The result is (in my opinion) probably the best beer you can get outside of a microbrewery in South East Asia (I am partial to Brewerkz XIPA and Mougwai in Singapore).
This started showing up in Bangkok last year. Before that, one of my friends was working in Lamphun and getting a case a week delivered from across the border (somehow).
On the street in Bangkok - in cans - it was quite good, and tasted like it does in Laos. But in Penh it tasted off. I don't know if that is due to poor storage, or if they were adding formaldahyde to help keep it for export (like the Egyptian beers in the 80's).
The dark was new when I went back, but quite satisfying.

Best option is to fly to Vientiane and get it on tap.

But, if it's being exported to Canada or the US, I'd like to hear about it!
#50
Posted 27 June 2007 - 11:09 AM
But Berliner Kindl Weiss (yes, it's also available here if you look hard enough) is hardly a pilsner.
He didn't say the "Berliner Kindl *Weisse*"- he meant, I take it, the pils from Berliner Kindl - http://www.berliner-kindl.de/ - "Berliner Kindl" being the name of the brewery- or, at least, the former name of the brewery- the parent company merged it with it's former rival, Schultheiss , so now it's the officially the Berliner-Kindl-Schultheiss-Brauerei.
And, unfortunately, the Weisse is no longer exported to the US, so if you know of a supply, pick it up before someone else (like me <g>) finds it.
Edited by jesskidden, 27 June 2007 - 11:12 AM.
#51
Posted 27 June 2007 - 11:37 AM
#52
Posted 27 June 2007 - 11:39 AM
#53
Posted 27 June 2007 - 12:28 PM
peter you drink a lot of beer (like me), what are your favorites?
Favourites (venturing off topic from Pils)......that's tough. Beers are like friends, it's good to have a lot you get along with.
Beer Lao (that was obvious)
Bier La Rue in Vietnam (which was the original brewery in the French days as Beer Lao - you'll recognize the black panther) - like Beer Lao - you can drink it warm.
Budvar (but I haven't found a lot of it outside of Mongolia)
The cream bitter at the Londoner in Bangkok. It's a compromise bitter between the North and South of England, but I like it.
Brewerkz Singapore's XIPA and MoGwai. The XIPA is everything you want in an IPA, and then overhopped, and the MoGwai has a deep maltiness that's intriguing.
Bowen Island Blonde - just a nice blond
Hophead - a good sitting around Vancouver beer
Eumundi - I still have fond memories of this beer while driving down the coast of Oz
Fuller's London Pride
Tetley's
Leffe blonde and Pauwel Kwack in Brussels (or Calgary) and any framboise in Brussels
I'm actually kind of partial to Hite in Korea, although I don't know why. I used to like Crown, but I don't think it exists under that name anymore.
La Fin du Monde and the Maudite (the Quebecois may actually make better Belgian beers than the Belgians)
Guiness - but seldom after 9:00 a.m.
Those are the ones that come to the top of my mind, which probably means that if I don't have to check my notes, they've gotta be my favourites.
#54
Posted 27 June 2007 - 12:34 PM
any korean beer is gross, the only good thing about it is that you can drink in public and buy it from a vending machine
ever have t'smisje blonde or foret (saison)? those would be great to drink in this hot weather as would ice cold pilsners. I wish my boyfriend would drink on the weekdays...summer vacation is boring ):
#55
Posted 27 June 2007 - 01:11 PM
Radeberger started popping up here in NYC in the past year or so. Another German pilsner I've just had here very recently was Mahrs Brau, which was nice, but not as crisp and balanced as I prefer -- a bit flabby and nondescript. Of course, it may well have been the fault of the bar, which has a few too many draught lines (a whopping 66) to be sure they're all clean and fresh...
But Berliner Kindl Weiss (yes, it's also available here if you look hard enough) is hardly a pilsner.
Christopher
Berliner Kindl has been making a pils here for 100 years. They started with weizen but moved on to other styles. They even make a Radler with their pils. It is half beer half lemonade. I can't stand it but it is very popular here in Germany. All of the large brewers make a version of this.
#56
Posted 27 June 2007 - 01:25 PM
Radeberger started popping up here in NYC in the past year or so. Another German pilsner I've just had here very recently was Mahrs Brau, which was nice, but not as crisp and balanced as I prefer -- a bit flabby and nondescript. Of course, it may well have been the fault of the bar, which has a few too many draught lines (a whopping 66) to be sure they're all clean and fresh...
But Berliner Kindl Weiss (yes, it's also available here if you look hard enough) is hardly a pilsner.
Christopher
Berliner Kindl has been making a pils here for 100 years. They started with weizen but moved on to other styles.
Well, whoops. Since the weizen that Berliner Kindl makes is really a style unto itself (and one that has detractors as avid as its lovers), I always assumed it was the only style they produced. Pardon my misguided presumption!
Christopher










