What's Your Beer?

Tilt is awesome. (the energy drink beer/malt whatever you call it)
....but now I cant find it anywhere
These fu(king mormon d0uche bags in utah passed a bill limiting the sale of flavored alcoholic beverages to liquor stores only. As a result, many companies are not even bothering with utah.
 
Tilt is awesome. (the energy drink beer/malt whatever you call it)
....but now I cant find it anywhere
These fu(king mormon d0uche bags in utah passed a bill limiting the sale of flavored alcoholic beverages to liquor stores only. As a result, many companies are not even bothering with utah.

LOL @ Malt Beverages.


And I'm suprised nobody said anything about that picture I posted. The dude in the middle is Bob Cannon, the brewmaster from all of the Samuel Adams commercials. I was in Boston at the brewery with my bro and he was just standing outside chatting with some guys and I asked him for a picture. Real nice fellow.
 
LOL @ Malt Beverages.


And I'm suprised nobody said anything about that picture I posted. The dude in the middle is Bob Cannon, the brewmaster from all of the Samuel Adams commercials. I was in Boston at the brewery with my bro and he was just standing outside chatting with some guys and I asked him for a picture. Real nice fellow.
I thought that's who it was but wasnt sure. cool man

Tilts are an energy drink w/ alch...
just a nice pre-party warm up :D
 
I thought that's who it was but wasnt sure. cool man

Tilts are an energy drink w/ alch...
just a nice pre-party warm up :D

My roomate loves those things. He also likes JOOZE. Basically the same thing with a little higher alc content (9%) and it's like 32oz or something crazy. Haha. I can't even imagine how much sugar is in it. Blah!
 
LOL @ Malt Beverages.


And I'm suprised nobody said anything about that picture I posted. The dude in the middle is Bob Cannon, the brewmaster from all of the Samuel Adams commercials. I was in Boston at the brewery with my bro and he was just standing outside chatting with some guys and I asked him for a picture. Real nice fellow.
I knew it! I just checked it out and thought the guy in the pic. was a little bigger.
 
The Cannon Brew-Pub
My two local beer choices...

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By all accounts, the British ex-pats in India during the Raj were as temperate and polite as a Liverpool football hooligan at a soccer riot. Which is to say, not. A typical day consisted of getting magnificently bladdered and acting as though the free world was one’s water closet.

Of course, demand for ale from home was higher than British tariffs on exported goods, but a typical ale took the long voyage about as well as John Keats, so intrepid brewers slammed their ales with hops to preserve them en route to India, inadvertently ratcheting up the alcohol content exponentially, turning the ex-pat wankers into full-on tosspots. What the brewers didn’t know was that ales with extra hops cause the mouth to pucker, producing the desire to drink more. And faster. Well done, old chap. All of India thanks you. And so do we.

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Modern day stout is the good-natured, demure honor student offspring of the cranky, bare-chested old style porter. During the early heady days of the Industrial Revolution, with all the advancements in science and technology, it only made sense to cast our inquisitive gaze down to our mugs and think, “What if?” The same experiment that would later yield “Snakebites” and “Half and Halves” was conducted on a grand scale in the early 18th century when people concocted a “suicide”-like drink that required a pint of unhopped sweet ale, a light hopped beer, and a “two penny” strong beer.

Known either as “Three Threads” or an “Entire Butt,” it became all the rage, much to the chagrin of bartenders everywhere who were now forced to visit three barrels to fill a single mug. Then, to the rescue, came Ralph Harwood, who in 1722 brewed an imitation “butt,” dubbed a porter, a dark, heavy, strong beer with a creamy head. And how the Brits did rejoice. And then, shortly after, fall down.

They have a new one called, "Chattahoochee Brown Ale," which is paler than a porter, yet more bronzed than a pale, our brown ale swirls with a hint of chocolate and a note of caramel. Mmmmm, soooo damn tasty! This is quickly becoming a favorite of mine as well.
 
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