Your favorite Beer.

warpus said:
I see a lot of good beers mentioned here - staropramen, kozel, heffe, pilsner urquell, ... (aside from the 3 i mentioned above)

Pilsner Urquell goes down like butter...it's delicious and supremely drinkable.

Of the large scale Brazilian beers I think Bohemia is the best. Of course all Brazilian beers suck in comparisson to their German counterparts, though. I drink a lot of Erdinger, because that's the German beer most sold around here.

The chopp oscuro is great in Brazil, though. (Unpasteurized dark draft beer for those who don't know. Tastes like a frothy beer milkshake.)
 
weihenspehanweisse.jpg


Weihenstephaner Heffe-Weissebier

I used to think Weihenstephan was a decent beer. But now I think it's crap. I don't know why, there's something about that makes me unable to finish a glass.
 
The chopp oscuro is great in Brazil, though. (Unpasteurized dark draft beer for those who don't know. Tastes like a frothy beer milkshake.)

Chopp escuro. :)

And yeah, chopp in Brazil is pretty good. Brahma among the big ones in particular, Devassa among the small.
 
Either:
- People that ove belgian beer don't post because they know they won't be found original. ie. people post here to promote original beers that no one ever heard off. Because everybody already knows Belgian beers are the best of the world*, they don't post.
- People don't want to admit they love Belgian beer
- They don't realise we have around 8700 kinds of beer. Instead they think belgian beer = inbev. Which is obviously false.

Check: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgian_beer

My favorite:
Spoiler :
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/monks-who-make-worlds-best-beer-pray-for-quiet-life-502172.html

For more than 160 years the Trappist monks at Saint Sixtus monastery in Flanders have been producing a rich, dark-brown, beer renowned for its exceptional flavour and strength. But an unexpected misfortune has befallen this reclusive community of 26 Cistercians: their beer has been named the best in the world.

So great is demand that stocks are exhausted and sales have been stopped. As hits on the monastery website reach 2,000 a day, Saint Sixtus has been deluged with requests for media interviews from the US to Bulgaria.

At the gates of the monastery, near the French border and 50 miles from Calais, a notice directs visitors across the road to the claustrum, an exhibition on monastic life. Normally, the only outsiders allowed to visit the silent order are those who seek spiritual contemplation.

But Mark Bode, co-ordinator of the claustrum, has agreed to speak to The Independent and leads the way to a spartan office where he explains the principle behind the brewery. "It is to produce as much beer as we need to finance the community," Mr Bode says. "We make the beer to live but we do not live for beer." Hence their anxiety about the accolade by www.rateBeer.com, an independent US-based site for beer enthusiasts, which named Westvleteren Abt 12 the best. One of the two other monastery brews. Westvleteren Extra 8, is rated as the ninth best.

Most brewers would be delighted; the monks of Saint Sixtus are not. Mr Bode says: "They are worried about the publicity, about the hype around the beer. This is double-edged. It is a problem." He lives in the nearby town of Poperinge but knows how the monks think because he spent a year in their community. "Outsiders don't understand," he says. "They say, 'You are successful, make more beer; you will make more money'. But the monks believe the most important thing is monastic life, not the brewery."

So production will remain at 4,500 hectolitres a year, between 70 and 75 days of brewing. Belgium has more than 100 breweries and exports many "abbey" beers, only some of which have links to religious orders. But there are only six Trappist beers, Westmalle, Westvleteren, Achel, Chimay, Rochefort and Orval, all of which are brewed by monks.

Of these Westvleteren is the rarest because it has not been distributed commercially since 1941 and can be bought only at Saint Sixtus where, even in times of plenty, customers are rationed to five cases of 24 bottles. At the loading bay for car sales (closed), and the café at the claustrum, customers promise not to sell the beer. They do, at double the price. In the café, the one place Westvleteren is still available, visitors may buy only six 33cl bottles.

Inside the monastery's walled compound is a small, modern, bottling plant manned by three monks, producing 12,000 bottles an hour. Outside, three monks are loading crates on pallets. No one is speaking (permitted only in an absolute necessity) though a monk smiles as he hands us each a half-filled bottle of beer and another toots a horn as he sweeps by on a forklift truck

The monks sleep in dormitories and pray for up to six hours a day in seven sessions starting at 3.30am. They may consume a light beer, Westvleteren Blond, which, with an alcohol content of 5.8 per cent, is the weakest drink produced here.

The two others are brown ales: Westvleteren 8 (with 8 per cent alcohol), and the much-prized Abt 12 (Abt is Dutch for Abbot ) with its rich bouquet, strong flavour, slightly bitter aftertaste and alcohol content of 10.2 per cent. The unlabelled bottles can be distinguished by metal tops.

Brewing began in 1838 because the workers who built the monastery were entitled to two glasses of beer a day. With an alcohol content not much lower than that of some wines, the rarity of Abt 12 has won it a cult following. But the real secret may lie in the lack of commercialisation which makes Westvleteren almost impossible to buy.


edit: note: despite being rare, it's not that expensive. Only drunk it once as a reward for helping at a beer happening.

*) I would guess we win like 75% of the big/independant international beer contests (at least)
 
The Belgian ales I've tried are too strong and biting for my taste, sadly. But I'm boring, so ymmv.
 
Red Stripe. Jamaican for beer.

Great, smooth, heady, and none of that tap water aftertaste. Not a lite beer though.

Followed by Taiwan Beer. Clean lager. No foo-farrah, but who really wants it when your drinking a beer?

Pyramid's Peach Weizen is really tasty... in a "Are you sure this is beer?" kind of way.

Need to try more beers though... hard after I 'quit' drinking. I know that local brewed stuff and brewery specials tend to be good (couldn't stay in business otherwise).

One beer that I cannot see the appeal of: Heineken. Absolutely the worst tasting swill I have ever had the displeasure of attempting to imbibe. I prefer LIGHT BEERS of ANY cheap as you can buy it 40packs brand to Heineken. I do not understand the appeal.
 
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