Posted on 09/14/2006 11:35:43 AM PDT by Abathar
Where is the best beer in America?
According to Men's Journal magazine, it's in Paso Robles, Calif.
The magazine ranked Firestone Walker Pale Ale as the best beer in America, followed by Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA, which is produced in Milton, Del.
Rounding out the top five are Stoudt's Pils, of Adamstown, Pa.; Russian River Temptation Ale, of Santa Rosa, Calif.; and Avery Mephistopheles' Stout, of Boulder, Colo.
It has chosen what the editors call the top 25 craft brews that this country has to offer.
The company said its editors put their "sensitive palettes to the test" and have determined the most flavorful microbrews, also judging on the basis of it being refreshing while appealing to a variety of different tastes.
Men's Journal's third annual survey of the Best Beers in America is featured in its October issue.
Anyhow, I do think Alaskan Amber deserves to be on the list...it's a pretty decent beer.
It's not supposed to. The majority of beer-drinking Americans are happy with crap beer.
Agreed. But is it brewed in America?
In college ANY beer is a good beer if memory serves (And there are quite a few holes in that memory I might add...)
"The majority of beer-drinking Americans are happy with crap beer."
And the majority of the craft beer-making people wish they could sell their products to the 85% of the beer-drinking Americans.
Doesn't help the cause to belittle a potential market.
One man's crap, is another man's.... ;)
Point is more like a Hefeweizen than a Lager...yeast content is pretty high, it's a meal in a bottle.
"But is it brewed in America?"
Forgot the qualifier.
"18 - Alaskan Amber: Juneau, AK"
Considering what a young company Alaskan Amber is, I think us Alaskan Amber groupies should be pround it made the list.
Thanks for that listing and the thread....I am quite familiar with several of those brews...
We live in the Pacific Northwest, and have tons and tons of Microbreweries around...have relatives living down in Oregon and California, which also have many fine microbreweries....we make it a point of visiting all these places, whether the brewery themselves, or restaurants which feature these fine brews...
We are newly retired...soon, very soon, we plan to head out in our spiffy RV, and spend most of our retired time on the road, returning to our regular house, only for a rest here and there...
One of our goals, is to visit every microbrewery in America, and sample their wares, whether in the brewery itself, or in one of the pubs or restaurants that feature those brews...
We also have a fine collection of growlers...does everyone here know what a growler is?,..I ask, only because I have come across many beer drinkers, who have no idea what a growler is....
A growler is a large glass bottle, in which you can ask the restaurant you are visiting to fill up the growler with your preferred draft beer...its a fine way to take out a huge bottle of draft beer, whether to be enjoyed at home, in your RV, wherever...the beer is recommended to be consumed within, I think between 24-48 hours, to retain its freshness...you cannot drink the growler in the restaurant, simply because the cost of filling up the growler is quite minimal, compared to the price of a single glass of beer or a pitcher of beer...but growlers are a fine way of taking your draft beer home with you, to enjoy at your own leisure...
All growlers are different..they are usually the same size, but some are clear glass, some are a brown glass, some varying tints of glass...some have just screw on caps, some have rather fancy caps...most have some sort of advertisement on the growler, emphasizing the micro brewery where they came from...
We have about 12 growlers now...one is even a collapsible plastic growler, handy for when it is empty...we even have a special thermal jacket bought at one micro-brewery, which tightly and completely encasses the growler to keep the beer cold for even longer, on the ride home..
One of my favorite micro-brewery beers is the Jolly Roger Ale, put out by Maritime Pacific Brewery in Seattle Washington..its quite strong, and its a seasonal beer, put out at Christmastime...I have included a link to the Jolly Roger taproom...
http://maritimebrewery.citysearch.com/tab0/page/nun8/Chef_s_List/Chef_s_List.html%253Fpagecode%253Dnun8
Another fine brewery is the Port Townsend brewery in Port Townsend Washington, up on the Peninsula...its a very small brewery, but one can go to their tasting room, in Port Townsend, and attatched to the tasting room, is a lovely beer garden, and being as the weather in Port Townsend, is lovely most months of the year, one can sit out and enjoy...its difficult to get Port Townsend beer, too much outside of the Port Townsend area as they really only distribute the beer within a very small area...so we usually once a year, take a trip up to Port townsend, see the Olympic Mountains, camp on the Peninsula, visit the brewery and of course, sample their wares, take a growler to go and a buy several boxes of their fine beer...
Here is the link to the Port Townsend brewery, should anyone ever be in the area, stop in there and have a fine beer...
http://www.porttownsendbrewing.com/
So many breweries from which to sample, so little time...I suppose I need to live to be about 100, in order to sample all these fine beers...ah, but my hubby and I find the hunt, and the task ahead to be quite delightful...
It's still one of the best, regardless of where it's brewed.
"How come when I get an Alaskan Amber(18) I get it with a slice of lemon on the rim?"
Last time I checked, the liquor store does not provide lemons with a case of Amber. Just local establishment practices you must have encountered.
LOL...been there done this and didn't care for it..8>)
I'm surprised anybody remembers that after all these years.
About 8 years ago, I drove my mom 13 hours to visit my sister for Christmas. We arrived and I was exhausted from driving, so they took us out to dinner on X-Mas Eve. We went to some microbrew place in Daytona and not realizing it, I told the waiter, after trying to decifer the beer menu, to just get me a Coors Light. The jerk immediately went into French snotiness and sniffed that they didn't serve that stuff there! Nonetheless, his snippiness cost him his tip while I sampled some of the microbrewery's pisswater.
I'm not a snob when it comes to beer, though I do admit to a passion for Amstel. Gimme a can of Busch over some of that microbrewed stuff anyday.
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