Indeed... Nail hit firmly on head.TheWiggman said:Would be an interesting one to try, given Stone's creds with highly hopped, strong ales. 'True' pilsners are a subtle style and my limited experience with the so-called craft brewers trying to do a pils ends up not hitting the mark because there's too much hop flavour or not enough focus on bitterness and grainy malt bite.
I find it one that brewers try to reinvent and in the process do a hoppy lager that doesn't hit the spot. Watching with interest.
Couldn't agree more: whoever invented the idea of IPL is at the top of my "against the wall" list.TheWiggman said:I find it one that brewers try to reinvent and in the process do a hoppy lager that doesn't hit the spot. Watching with interest.
I was chatting with the brewers at Little Brewing Co once and they mentioned they'd gotten a lot of bad reviews on one of the beer rating apps for their KolschRocker1986 said:I agree with the above as well. I have tried a few pilsners that just don't meet my expectations of what they should be, especially these bloody "new world" ones. They present like pale ales, and although I love hoppy pale ales, when I drink a pilsner I expect it to taste like one, not a bloody west coast IPA or something.
That said, I hope to be able to try this at some stage, because it can't really be judged until it has been tried. Will be interesting for sure.
But won't this just lead to nothing but 10%+ ABV beers hogging the taps like IPA's and their derivatives are now? Don't get me wrong, I love an IPA and I love a RIS, but the first overloads my palate after a couple and the second overloads my balance after a couple. Bring on the mild craze, so I can actually have more than a few without being done for the night.sp0rk said:Can the next craze please be RIS/Export Stouts?
That is actually a far better ideapaulyman said:Bring on the mild craze, so I can actually have more than a few without being done for the night.
Hopheads dominate Ratebeer and Beer Advocate, but give a misleading picture of what appeals to the general public. If you look at the beers that are craft in style but sell really well, the flagship brews that made some craft brewers grow big, they range from malty and mildly hopped to fairly strongly hopped, but not extreme. S & W Pacific and Little Creatures Pale are good examples of moderately hop forward ales. In the US, where most of the raters live, there's SN Pale on the hoppy side, Doggy Style a bit more so, Anchor Steam less so, and well-balanced brews like Sam Adams Boston Lager, Anchor Steam, Goose Island Honkers Ale (regrettably now owned by Anheuser-InBev), Red Hook ESB, Alaska Amber and New Belgium Fat Tire. Milwaukee's top seller is an excellent Vienna lager. In the UK the leading quality brewers like T & T, Fuller's and Sam Smith put out a variety of brews, little of it highly hopped. Of course there's also Brewdog's IPAs in the UK, Dogfish Head IPAs in the US along with Stone's IPAs and Mendocino's Old Rasputin, big sellers, but not as much as the beers noted above.sp0rk said:I was chatting with the brewers at Little Brewing Co once and they mentioned they'd gotten a lot of bad reviews on one of the beer rating apps for their Kolsch
Almost every single one was "should be much hoppier"
This is a good example of my thought that the hop craze has gone full retard
Can the next craze please be RIS/Export Stouts?
It's all about balance between the 2good4whatAlesU said:The definitive flavour comes from the roasted grains, not so much the high alcohol content
We have a tax* reduction for light beers rather than a penalty on strong beers. Same effect, but Treasury** has published a white paper calling for rationalisation of all alcohol taxes which would presumably mean moving them all to the spirits rate. That's currently roughly $1.00 / standard drink, almost double the beer rate.yankinoz said:That won't happen in Australia because of the tax penalty on strong beers.
Would it just be a flat rate per drink or per percentage of alcohol? Because if flat rate then everyone would make higher alcohol percentage, if per percentage maybe we'd end up like the UK with a bunch of < 4% beers.Lyrebird_Cycles said:We have a tax* reduction for light beers rather than a penalty on strong beers. Same effect, but Treasury** has published a white paper calling for rationalisation of all alcohol taxes which would presumably mean moving them all to the spirits rate. That's currently roughly $1.00 / standard drink, almost double the beer rate.
They have support from the wowser lobby: one of the big drivers of this is that wine pays no excise, just a higher level of ad valorem tax ( WET + GST) so cheap (bad) wine is the cheapest drunk available. The health lobby would really like to get rid of this, trouble is it will send a bunch of people in the irrigation areas broke.
One way the whole thing could be managed is to move the excise threshold from 1.15 (% ABV) to say 2.5 which would minimise the impact on the big brewers who wouldn't let it though otherwise. The 1.15 is an anachronism anyway. The idea is to encourage the production of low alcohol wine and it's usually pretty bad so it doesn't matter much if you make it from cheap grapes.
* it's an excise rather than a tax, not that it matters for this discussion)
** The government department, not the wine co.
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