On my trips to Africa I'm forced to drink Europiss style beers like Gulder, Star, Tusker and Primus. The funny thing is that at the end of a long sweaty day stuck for over three hours in traffic jams even Europiss tastes quite acceptable. OTOH I've tried a couple back home in our cool, low-odour UK environment and they tasted terrible.
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I can remember 16. Most are nothing to write home about. Popular doesn't mean best. VB in Austalia is no better thsn Carling.
Hook Norton used to brew a mild and sell it in small bottles years ago, it was lovely stuff. They've had a stronger mild on draught recently. I mentioned the bottled stuff to the their top man a while back but I think it was before his time. Any road up they've just reintroduced it and I'm taking full credit for this.
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I can remember 16. Most are nothing to write home about. Popular doesn't mean best. VB in Austalia is no better thsn Carling.
Fair point well made.I'd rather be drinking VB in Australia than drinking Carling in England.
Well, as someone noted upthread, it's more challenging to get all that flavour out of a low abv brew (but not impossible - Oakham Dolphin Dance being a case in point). So I think you can say, uncontraversially, that a high abv is more likely to be tasty than a low abv.Who gives a stuff about how 'strong' a beer is, for me it is more about taste/flavour than "oh this is a 5.4 and that is a 4.6 so it must be better" malarkey.
Theakston's OP is a bit too rich & treacly for me - more of a winter sort of a beerHaving said that I am partial to Theakstons Old Peculiar but more than 4 pints leaves me a bit "tired and emotional" (Everards 'Old Original' does the same after 6 pints but a well kept Mild allows me about 8-10 before cycling becomes a 'problem')![]()
Good camping ale, you don't have to get up in the night quite so often.Well, as someone noted upthread, it's more challenging to get all that flavour out of a low abv brew (but not impossible - Oakham Dolphin Dance being a case in point). So I think you can say, uncontraversially, that a high abv is more likely to be tasty than a low abv.
Theakston's OP is a bit too rich & treacly for me - more of a winter sort of a beer![]()