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#31
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Ken, in a reflective mood, sha
=========== There were a whole lot of Weckers and Steppigs, my relations, who worked at Anheuser-Busch and to a man they had nothing but respect and admiration for the Busch family. ============= I know nothing about the family: they may or may not have been goods people. But surely your Weckers and Steppigs would have yearned for the beers of the vaterland. If the Busch family had stayed with the recipes of the vaterland, they'd likely be brewing good beers today. And why did they change the recipe of a good Czech beer. The took the name, why not the recipe? frtzw906 |
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#33
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BCITORGB wrote:
If the Busch family had stayed with the recipes of the vaterland, they'd likely be brewing good beers today. And why did they change the recipe of a good Czech beer. The took the name, why not the recipe? It's all about cost. I'm sure that Budweiser has the ability to brew excellent beer (it's not difficult), but they can't do it at their price point while at the same time spending gazillions on advertising. To meet their costs they have to use inferior ingredients (like rice) and extremely high-volume processes. Another factor is that their customers, by and large, don't care about quality. They're the rough equivalent of wine drinkers who buy cheap muscatel. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#34
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BCITORGB wrote:
Ken challenges: ============== But here's my challenge to you, Mr. Flatulence In Every Glass Fancy Shmancy Home Brewer, brew up your best pilsner and we'll let a dozen random beer drinkers do a blind taste test with your best and a brewery fresh Budweiser from St. Louis. ============= No contest. ANYBODY can brew a better beer than the commercial brewers. Home-built wine may be another matter, but you'd have to be a complete idiot to do a worse job than any big brewery. I've been issuing that challenge for going on 20 years now and no home brewer has *ever* taken it. They'll hem and haw and change the subject just like dear old Dan'l or they'll mutter something about walk-in coolers, but they'll never take you up on it. Beers like Budweiser are *not* easy to brew at home and it's one hell of a home brewer who can even get *close* to a pilsner as good as a Budweiser. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#35
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![]() "BCITORGB" wrote in message ups.com... Ken, in a reflective mood, sha =========== There were a whole lot of Weckers and Steppigs, my relations, who worked at Anheuser-Busch and to a man they had nothing but respect and admiration for the Busch family. ============= I know nothing about the family: they may or may not have been goods people. But surely your Weckers and Steppigs would have yearned for the beers of the vaterland. If the Busch family had stayed with the recipes of the vaterland, they'd likely be brewing good beers today. And why did they change the recipe of a good Czech beer. The took the name, why not the recipe? frtzw906 Because it costs too much. If bud (or Miller or Coors etc..) actually put enough barley and hops in their recipe to be decent beer or if they actually lagered their "lager", the cost of goods would skyrocket. Danl |
#36
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Ken Fortenberry wrote:
You still don't get it. You can say "I don't like Budweiser" and that's fine, different strokes, whatever. It's when you say Budweiser is a bad beer, or Clydesdale ****, or vile excrement, that's when you are indeed a clueless, dumbass, yuppie, nitwit, stupid, mother****ing moron of a beer snob. I guess I'm guilty as charged, though I wouldn't go as far as you did in my description of Bud. To me it's just watered-down, virtually-tasteless swill. Mediocre, over-advertised pablum for the masses who don't have the tastebuds to discern between Budmillors and real beer. But please, do go on ... you're getting shriller and shriller ... and funnier and funnier with each post. Chuck Vance (BTW, do you see any irony here in the fact that you, the self-proclaimed elitist, are the *only* one defending the big-corporation, mass-produced, beer-for-the-masses?) |
#37
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Ken Fortenberry wrote:
I've been issuing that challenge for going on 20 years now and no home brewer has *ever* taken it. They'll hem and haw and change the subject just like dear old Dan'l or they'll mutter something about walk-in coolers, but they'll never take you up on it. Beers like Budweiser are *not* easy to brew at home and it's one hell of a home brewer who can even get *close* to a pilsner as good as a Budweiser. Out of curiosity, I looked up a homebrewer discussion of how to clone Budweiser: http://hbd.org/discus/messages/1/28768.html It's fairly hilarious. The most interesting advice was to use Minute Rice (because it's pregelatinized) and almost no hops at all. Here's a post that sums up the problem of cloning Budweiser: "I am a big fan of cloning brews. I have made heiniken, newcastle brown ale, and various other homebrews that imitate commercial beers. I have always received the same response from my college peers, "Wow, tastes almost exactly like it, except better!" Bear in mind that as a homebrewer your product as well as the ingredients you use will be fresher than the commercial version. Imagine it like this. Try to duplicate a McDonalds double cheeseburger in your kitchen. Since McDonalds uses such crap ingredients and microwaves everything, it would be very hard for you to make the same exact product. Instead you would make something that tasted similar to it, but your burger would probably taste ten times better. You would use better beef, fresher cheese, and probably use a grill over a microwave. I found that the parallel between McDonalds for food, and Bud for beer is quite scary. My friends ask me why my beers have such flavor and bud tastes like water. My answer is; how can McDonalds make a double cheeseburger for 99cents, when a small soft drink from them is $1.30? The same way Bud can make a beer for a fraction of a penny by using virtually little to no ingredients. Scary huh?" -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#38
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Conan The Librarian wrote:
... (BTW, do you see any irony here in the fact that you, the self-proclaimed elitist, are the *only* one defending the big-corporation, mass-produced, beer-for-the-masses?) Irony ? No, I don't see any irony. What's ironic about a group of fly fishermen being dumbass, yuppie beer snobs ? Sounds more like business as usual to me. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#39
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rw wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote: I've been issuing that challenge for going on 20 years now and no home brewer has *ever* taken it. They'll hem and haw and change the subject just like dear old Dan'l or they'll mutter something about walk-in coolers, but they'll never take you up on it. Beers like Budweiser are *not* easy to brew at home and it's one hell of a home brewer who can even get *close* to a pilsner as good as a Budweiser. Out of curiosity, I looked up a homebrewer discussion of how to clone Budweiser: snip Nitwits quoting nitwits is supposed to mean what ? That even a ****in' putz can do a Google search ? Congratulations on your accomplishment. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#40
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Ken Fortenberry wrote:
Conan The Librarian wrote: ... (BTW, do you see any irony here in the fact that you, the self-proclaimed elitist, are the *only* one defending the big-corporation, mass-produced, beer-for-the-masses?) Irony ? No, I don't see any irony. What's ironic about a group of fly fishermen being dumbass, yuppie beer snobs ? Sounds more like business as usual to me. Yeah, I know what you mean. Flyfishers are basically a group of elitist snobs. Some would even say things like: Doesn't make a damn bit of difference what a majority of people think. If a majority of people thought a "Dogs Playing Poker" painting was a better painting than the Mona Lisa, the majority of people would be wrong. Or: "That one does not fish for trout with spinning lures or live bait is taken for granted, along with toilet training." -William Humphrey- I drown worms myself fishing for catfish. You're right it's a gas. Put the Cardinal game on the radio, drink beer, kick back in the lawn chair. But if you're talking about trout, I gotta admit to being an elitist snob that agrees more with Mr. Humphrey. Or maybe: Leader links are tacky little doodads for those who are too lazy or incompetent to tie good knots. You wouldn't hang a velvet Elvis in the Louvre, why put tacky **** on your flyline ? Or: Since when has elitism become a pejorative ? Why does it seem that slapping the elitist label on someone is enough to push their arguments beyond the pale of polite discussion ? You have to blind in one eye and unable to see out of the other not to realize that some people and some things ARE better than others. Some people are smarter and more honest than others and some ideas are better than others. Egalitarianism is seductive, but it seems perverse to deny common sense. It is a better thing we do to fish with dry flies rather than corn kernels, and if that makes me an elitist, I am proud to be an elitist. Or is it acceptable to be elitist only when you agree with Ken? Chuck Vance (don't worry ... that's a rhetorical question; you've already given your answer loud and clear) |
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