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Beer vs. Wine


BillsFanNC

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Anyone ever try Trappist beer? Wiki.

A Trappist beer is a beer brewed by or under control of Trappist monks. Of the world's 171 Trappist monasteries (as of April 2005), seven produce beer (six in Belgium and one in the Netherlands). Only these seven breweries are authorized to label their beers with the Authentic Trappist Product logo that indicates a compliance to various rules edicted by the International Trappist Association

 

I've always wanted to, but just can't justify paying wine prices for a bottle of beer.

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I no longer drink beer I only drink wine. I will say that the availability of artisan or craft beers over the years has grown and much better than it used to be it will never match the wine experience in my mind. Walk into a wine store and be amazed at all the different wines to choose from and that is only a very small percentage of what's available. Take a trip to wine counry, almost every state has one. Not too many beer countries out there. In my opinion wine wins hands down.

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I no longer drink beer I only drink wine. I will say that the availability of artisan or craft beers over the years has grown and much better than it used to be it will never match the wine experience in my mind. Walk into a wine store and be amazed at all the different wines to choose from and that is only a very small percentage of what's available. Take a trip to wine counry, almost every state has one. Not too many beer countries out there. In my opinion wine wins hands down.

 

You can thank the national brands like the Bud's and Miller's in the late 1960's and 1970's for killing brands like Iroquois and Simon Pure in towns like BFLO.

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Anyone ever try Trappist beer? Wiki.

 

Maredsous' is wonderful beer. Maredsous' 10 is one of my favorite beers, and is like a tripel. Technically, it's not a trappist beer as it's made by the duvel guys, but it's much, much better than a beer like Chimay.

 

 

I've always wanted to, but just can't justify paying wine prices for a bottle of beer.

 

That, my friend, is because you've never had a great barleywine or ipa.

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Maredsous' is wonderful beer. Maredsous' 10 is one of my favorite beers, and is like a tripel. Technically, it's not a trappist beer as it's made by the duvel guys, but it's much, much better than a beer like Chimay.

 

 

 

 

That, my friend, is because you've never had a great barleywine or ipa.

 

I've never tried a barley wine. I have tried and enjoyed IPA's though. I like "session" IPA's. When you go higher up the IBU chart though, it just gets too bitter for my taste. My wife enjoys the real bitter IPA's though.

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I've never tried a barley wine. I have tried and enjoyed IPA's though. I like "session" IPA's. When you go higher up the IBU chart though, it just gets too bitter for my taste. My wife enjoys the real bitter IPA's though.

 

Trappist beers aren't any more expensive than a good barleywine or IPA. :lol:

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I Just read an article how these down times will be a boon for cheap wine.

 

I read that too and I hate the word cheap. Sounds like you have to drink it out of a paper bag in the doorway of an abandoned building. I prefer the word inexpensive and recently I've discovered some great inexpensive wines. Mostly from Spain.

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I Just read an article how these down times will be a boon for cheap wine.

 

I know a gentleman that samples wines at the Harris Teeter (high end) supermarkets here. He said that until the downturn he would sell people $20.00 bottles of wine by the armful. People would throw them into the cart without hesitating. Now, the price points have dropped to the $5-$6 dollar range. He knows his stuff and as Chef said, he has recently discovered some good inexpensive wines, I believe he was referring to Brazilian.

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I know a gentleman that samples wines at the Harris Teeter (high end) supermarkets here. He said that until the downturn he would sell people $20.00 bottles of wine by the armful. People would throw them into the cart without hesitating. Now, the price points have dropped to the $5-$6 dollar range. He knows his stuff and as Chef said, he has recently discovered some good inexpensive wines, I believe he was referring to Brazilian.

 

 

Sometime ago Cincy got me onto: "Three Buck Chuck." @ Trader Joe's.

 

:thumbdown::rolleyes:

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I know a gentleman that samples wines at the Harris Teeter (high end) supermarkets here. He said that until the downturn he would sell people $20.00 bottles of wine by the armful. People would throw them into the cart without hesitating. Now, the price points have dropped to the $5-$6 dollar range. He knows his stuff and as Chef said, he has recently discovered some good inexpensive wines, I believe he was referring to Brazilian.

 

Funny though I bought a $45 bottle of French wine a couple of weeks back. Now when I buy the inexpensive stuff I usually buy wine with good reviews and 90 points but when we tried that $45 bottle (which I think was a 90 pointer too) my wife looks at me and says "wow, you can really tell the difference on a more expensive bottle." That whole point thing can be a scam but it helps sometimes.

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all of us.... the winner is all of us BillsFanNC.

 

I have absolutely nothing against wine, so I agree. My point, and the point of this contest was to showcase how fine craft beer can compete with and exceed wine as a choice with a gourmet meal. Beer in fact has more complexity to offer to compliment a meal in my opinion.

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Sometime ago Cincy got me onto: "Three Buck Chuck." @ Trader Joe's.

 

:thumbdown::rolleyes:

I guess that's inflation. A few years ago, I was introduced to Two Buck Chuck at Trader Joe's. Pretty good wine. But $3!?! Is it 33% better now? <_<

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Not too many beer countries out there.

 

I agree with your basic point but there are some good beer "countries" out there and the list is not that much shorter than wine countries - where there is great difference is in the sub-regions associated with wine. If you take the list to that level no doubt that the quantity of top flight wine producing regions will blow away beer.

 

Here are what i believe to be top tier beer countries

 

Belgium

Germany

England

Ireland

 

Are arguably "top tier" beer countries lines up with top wine countries:

 

France

United States

Australia

Chile

 

Next tier beer countries

 

United States

Canada

Japan (lack craft beers - but their everyday stuff is very good)

 

Lines up with next tier wine countries:

 

Germany

Spain

Italy

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Wine is fine but beer sometimes hits the spot. Burger and beer is very good. Baked fish with beer not so good. Fine dinning and wine go together. Pub food best with beer. I just like wine any time.

 

If you are talking macro lagers which most people think of as all 'beer' then the above is true, but if you account for all styles of beer then nothing can be further from the truth.

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