Founder's porter is excellent for a sessionable beer. Long Trail Imperial Porter is also great and only $5/bomber, though it's a baltic porter and a little higher ABV (8.3%).House Blend wrote:Funny about the Hopslam. Over the weekend I revisited my local Food Snob Emporium, hoping to pick up some up some interesting beers. No Breakfast Stout (grr), but there was an ample supply of Hopslam at about $3.50/bottle (with discount).
For the record, I picked out a sampler of these:
Founder's Dirty Bastard Ale
Bell's Hopslam Ale
Bell's Kalamazoo Stout (has licorice)
Dogfish Raison D'Etre
New Holland's The Poet (another oatmeal stout)
Great Lakes' Edmund Fitzgerald Porter
Let me put in a shout-out for the Edmund Fitzgerald. It's not one of these fancy schmanzy high ABV brews that calls attention to itself. But I keep coming back to it--haven't found any porter that's consistently better.
Boglehead Beer
-
- Posts: 57
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 11:51 am
I would have to refer you to my bumper sticker...
"I brew the beer I drink"
Just did an Irish Red Ale and named it after my son who was recently born. It was actually supposed to be ready on his due date, but wasn't fully carbonated. He was a week late and whadda ya know, it was ready. Kinda creepy though.
"I brew the beer I drink"
Just did an Irish Red Ale and named it after my son who was recently born. It was actually supposed to be ready on his due date, but wasn't fully carbonated. He was a week late and whadda ya know, it was ready. Kinda creepy though.
- XtremeSki2001
- Posts: 1733
- Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 1:28 pm
- Location: New York
Good find! 8) My local beer spot just received Founders Dirty Bastard, Dry Hopped Pale Ale and Red Rye IPA. Unfortunately, no Breakfast Stouts for us.BruDude wrote:Reviving this thread with a Founders Kentucky Breakfast Stout. Was lucky to pick up two 4-packs of these before they sold out everywhere. Long live KBS!
I did pick up a 6-pack of Ithaca's Flower Power IPA - it's very tasty and not as fruity as it sounds :lol: .
Das leben ist zu kurz um scheiss bier zu trinken?livefreebrewfree wrote:I would have to refer you to my bumper sticker...
"I brew the beer I drink"
A box of rain will ease the pain and love will see you through
- XtremeSki2001
- Posts: 1733
- Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 1:28 pm
- Location: New York
-
- Posts: 112
- Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2009 10:55 am
- Location: Oregon
- Contact:
Victory Wild Devil tonight. Lost a decent bit of the bottle to gushing when I opened it, but a pretty tasty beer nonetheless....the cork was damn near impossible to get out of it.
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/victory-wi ... ale/87250/
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/victory-wi ... ale/87250/
- XtremeSki2001
- Posts: 1733
- Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 1:28 pm
- Location: New York
Good find!BruDude wrote:Victory Wild Devil tonight. Lost a decent bit of the bottle to gushing when I opened it, but a pretty tasty beer nonetheless....the cork was damn near impossible to get out of it.
http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/victory-wi ... ale/87250/
A box of rain will ease the pain and love will see you through
- XtremeSki2001
- Posts: 1733
- Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 1:28 pm
- Location: New York
For those of you in the Philly area - the Easton made Weyerbacher Double Simcoe IPA is a delicious Imperial IPA .... I would compare it to Bell's Hopslam except Simcoe is cheaper and available year-round.
Last edited by XtremeSki2001 on Tue Apr 26, 2011 1:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
A box of rain will ease the pain and love will see you through
- CassiusKing
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 10:23 am
- Location: Ohio
I don't drink a lot of beer so I tend to buy better quality beers. Trader Joe's has some good beers under their name which are not too expensive.
Some of my favorite beers are:
Blind Pig
1554 Enlightened Black Ale
Sierra Nevada
I have done done some home brewing but don't think you save money unless you drink ALOT of beer once you factor in time and energy but can be a fun hobby. Here is a good place to start if you want to learn about beer. They have some great podcast.
http://www.basicbrewing.com/
Some of my favorite beers are:
Blind Pig
1554 Enlightened Black Ale
Sierra Nevada
I have done done some home brewing but don't think you save money unless you drink ALOT of beer once you factor in time and energy but can be a fun hobby. Here is a good place to start if you want to learn about beer. They have some great podcast.
http://www.basicbrewing.com/
- XtremeSki2001
- Posts: 1733
- Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 1:28 pm
- Location: New York
Thought I would bump this in honor of Fall beer season, namely Pumpkin Ales and Märzen (Oktoberfest) beer.
My stock is doing pretty well - this is what I have so far:
Pumkin Ales
Weyebacher Imperial Pumpkin
Dogfish Head Punkin
Southern Tier Pumking
Elysian Night Owl Pumpkin Ale
Märzen
Sam Adams Oktoberfest
Great Lakes Oktoberfest
Spaten Oktoberfest
Harpoon Oktoberfest
Victory Festbier
Brooklyn Oktoberfest
Flying Dog Dogtoberfest
Magic Hat Hextober
Brown Ales
Sierra Nevada Tumbler
Long Trail Harvest (after hearing/reading about all the help Long Trail provided to all those impacted by Hurrican Irene in VT - I always try to pick up a six pack when I'm out)
Southern Tier Harvest
Random Pickups
Dogfish Head Namaste (Witbier)
Russian River Supplication (Sour / Wild Ale)
Still Seeking the Following Fall Beer
Avery The Kaiser (Märzen)
Bell's Oktoberfest
Harpoon UFO Pumpkin
Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale
Brooklyn Post Road Pumpkin
Yuengling Oktoberfest (it's a Philly beer, but I have yet to see or hear anything about it)
*Note: I do a lot of build your own six packs so most of these I only buy one bottle. For those that I've tried before and I enjoy I usually buy a 4/6pack.
My stock is doing pretty well - this is what I have so far:
Pumkin Ales
Weyebacher Imperial Pumpkin
Dogfish Head Punkin
Southern Tier Pumking
Elysian Night Owl Pumpkin Ale
Märzen
Sam Adams Oktoberfest
Great Lakes Oktoberfest
Spaten Oktoberfest
Harpoon Oktoberfest
Victory Festbier
Brooklyn Oktoberfest
Flying Dog Dogtoberfest
Magic Hat Hextober
Brown Ales
Sierra Nevada Tumbler
Long Trail Harvest (after hearing/reading about all the help Long Trail provided to all those impacted by Hurrican Irene in VT - I always try to pick up a six pack when I'm out)
Southern Tier Harvest
Random Pickups
Dogfish Head Namaste (Witbier)
Russian River Supplication (Sour / Wild Ale)
Still Seeking the Following Fall Beer
Avery The Kaiser (Märzen)
Bell's Oktoberfest
Harpoon UFO Pumpkin
Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale
Brooklyn Post Road Pumpkin
Yuengling Oktoberfest (it's a Philly beer, but I have yet to see or hear anything about it)
*Note: I do a lot of build your own six packs so most of these I only buy one bottle. For those that I've tried before and I enjoy I usually buy a 4/6pack.
A box of rain will ease the pain and love will see you through
I didn't read all 5 pages of the thread, but CostCo Kirkland has the best trade-off between price and quality.
If I feel richer, Great Lakes.
If I travel to a place that sells it, Hacker Pschorr Weisse.
http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/76/772
If I feel richer, Great Lakes.
If I travel to a place that sells it, Hacker Pschorr Weisse.
http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/76/772
-
- Posts: 90
- Joined: Sat Jun 04, 2011 11:30 am
- Location: Virginia Beach, VA
- Contact:
Not to interrupt you beer snobs, please do go on enjoying yourselves after this short interuption, but since this *was* at one time the "Bogleheads Beer" thread, I just wanted to drop in once again to mention:
Yuengling, 12 pack, cold, @ CVS = $9.49 (with member card) subtract my "30% off on next purchase" discount that I saved from the last store receipt = $6.65.
About 50 cents per beer, in 2012, for icy cold bottled brew...
Now that's a Boglehead beer, IMHO!
:lol:
Yuengling, 12 pack, cold, @ CVS = $9.49 (with member card) subtract my "30% off on next purchase" discount that I saved from the last store receipt = $6.65.
About 50 cents per beer, in 2012, for icy cold bottled brew...
Now that's a Boglehead beer, IMHO!
:lol:
-
- Posts: 1033
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 4:10 am
- Location: Wisconsin
I recommend Leinenkugel's beer. It is not expensive relatively speaking, and of excellent quality.
http://www.bogleheads.org/forum/posting ... ly&t=68506
http://leinie.com/av.html
http://www.bogleheads.org/forum/posting ... ly&t=68506
http://leinie.com/av.html
Yuengling is the perfect "Boglehead Beer" except they don't sell it in my stateDRiP Guy wrote:Not to interrupt you beer snobs, please do go on enjoying yourselves after this short interuption, but since this *was* at one time the "Bogleheads Beer" thread, I just wanted to drop in once again to mention:
Yuengling, 12 pack, cold, @ CVS = $9.49 (with member card) subtract my "30% off on next purchase" discount that I saved from the last store receipt = $6.65.
About 50 cents per beer, in 2012, for icy cold bottled brew...
Now that's a Boglehead beer, IMHO!
:lol:
Whenever I go to NY I usually buy a case or two and bring it back.
Well, okay then!tj218 wrote:
Yuengling is the perfect "Boglehead Beer" except they don't sell it in my state
Whenever I go to NY I usually buy a case or two and bring it back.
heh heh -- hope you guys know I am kidding with the 'beer snobs' stuff -- anytime people talk about specialty interests, it eventually can get pretty esoteric...
BTW, what is the best pilsner for less than $5,000?
:lol:
Re: Boglehead Beer
Just want to thank America for shipping up to Canada one of my favourite beers when splurging.Thetightfist wrote:What is a Boglehead beer? It should have good taste but it should be reasonable in cost, right?
What is the beer of choice for the Boglehead? Also, what is the beer of choice when splurging?
:lol:
Fantastic stuff.
I'll tell you what beer I would not want to drink again. You may remember that years ago, before supermarkets had their own brands of food (America's Choice, etc.), Pathmark had a "no-frills" line. White labels, black lettering. And one of their offerings was no-frills beer.
And please don't tell me that you have fond memories of drinking this stuff!
And please don't tell me that you have fond memories of drinking this stuff!
Abita Beer for this boglehead. www.abita.com
Amber for a normal day and Andygator for a abnormal day.
Amber for a normal day and Andygator for a abnormal day.
Never underestimate the power of the force of low cost index funds.
I visited Goose Island in Chicago this summer. Good stuff.CassiusKing wrote:Tipped back a Goose Island Vanilla Bourbon County Stout this past weekend. It's doing mighty fine.
Heading out of town for DL day this weekend. Will there be any other Bogleheads in attendance?
Never underestimate the power of the force of low cost index funds.
Liked Abita, but the NOLA beers were a step up.ofcmetz wrote:Abita Beer for this boglehead.
http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/18854
Here's to you!
$11.99/half case, on sale at Harris Teeter in Northern Virginia this week, except they don't have 1/2 cases. So, they let me go with a pair of 6-packs at the 1/2 case sale price. I'll be visiting them up again before Wednesday for a refill.
$11.99/half case, on sale at Harris Teeter in Northern Virginia this week, except they don't have 1/2 cases. So, they let me go with a pair of 6-packs at the 1/2 case sale price. I'll be visiting them up again before Wednesday for a refill.
Last edited by tinscale on Fri Sep 16, 2011 7:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- jeffyscott
- Posts: 13438
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 8:12 am
DRiP Guy wrote:Not to interrupt you beer snobs, please do go on enjoying yourselves after this short interuption, but since this *was* at one time the "Bogleheads Beer" thread, I just wanted to drop in once again to mention:
Yuengling, 12 pack, cold, @ CVS = $9.49 (with member card) subtract my "30% off on next purchase" discount that I saved from the last store receipt = $6.65.
About 50 cents per beer, in 2012, for icy cold bottled brew...
Now that's a Boglehead beer, IMHO!
:lol:
I've never had one, it's not sold here. I remember them selling it in the stands when we went to a couple ball games in Pittsburgh. But it's only about 4.5% alcohol and I had read that for about the same high price one could get a rail bender (6.8%) from the microbrew stand...and it was tasty too.
At home I mostly go with the seasonal beers from Point, currently that is Oktoberfest
St. Benedict's Ale in winter, Einbock in spring and Nude Beach for summer. I get these at a liquor store near work for $10.99 in a 12 pack of bottles (some now also in cans for $9.99, 12 pack)
These beers range from 5.2-6.2% alcohol, with a weighted average of 5.8%...so calculating, lets see, that is about 30% more alcohol for about 16% more money. I think I win .
Another pretty good beer, despite the appearance of the can:
I think I have gotten that for $6.99/12 pack
In the late 70s - early 80s HEB in central Texas(Austin) had "Generic Beer". White can with black lettering. In small print somewhere on the can(don't remember) it indicated Falstaff produced it. Purdy good and cheap too.Tom_T wrote:I'll tell you what beer I would not want to drink again. You may remember that years ago, before supermarkets had their own brands of food (America's Choice, etc.), Pathmark had a "no-frills" line. White labels, black lettering. And one of their offerings was no-frills beer.
And please don't tell me that you have fond memories of drinking this stuff!
Re: Boglehead Beer
Ah, nuts. After making fun of you guys buying all those specialty beers instead of just plain old beer; today I was intrigued by the appearance of Sierra Nevada Ruthless Rye at my local supermarket.
Crap.
As a lapsed homebrewer, I do particularly love a hoppy brew, and one where you can taste the grain.
So, grudgingly, Sierra Nevada Ruthless Rye for the win.
Crap.
As a lapsed homebrewer, I do particularly love a hoppy brew, and one where you can taste the grain.
So, grudgingly, Sierra Nevada Ruthless Rye for the win.
Re: Boglehead Beer
A bit OT, but I usually grab a 6 pack of Guinness Stout to drink every St. Patty's day. The bottles in the past has been a standard 12 oz version. The 6 pack that I acquired a few weeks ago contained bottles with only 11.2oz! I felt ripped off.
Part-Owner of Texas |
|
“The CMH-the Cost Matters Hypothesis -is all that is needed to explain why indexing must and will work… Yes, it is that simple.” John C. Bogle
-
- Posts: 1033
- Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2011 4:10 am
- Location: Wisconsin
Re: Boglehead Beer
This boglehead likes Lienenkugel's beer. I especially like their Amber and Creamy Dark. The Sunset Wheat is good too.
It is made in Chippewa Falls and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. And it isn't real expensive either but definitely quality.
It is made in Chippewa Falls and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. And it isn't real expensive either but definitely quality.