The Beer Hunter, RIP
Michael Jackson, who died last week at the age of 65, made a career of sharing his enthusiasm for the world's myriad beer styles with people who were accustomed to the bland, indistinguishable lagers that dominate the U.S. market. Eventually enough of them shared his enthusiasm to support a microbrew revolution that has brought real diversity to bars, restaurants, and grocery stores throughout the country.
When I was in college, beer choices consisted of Pabst (if money was tight), Molson (the standard), and Moosehead (for special occasions)—all of which tasted pretty much the same. I never cared much for beer, viewing it mainly as a way to get drunk. Later, under the influence of beer-loving friends and experts such as Jackson, I discovered how variations in malt, hops, yeast, and fermentation could produce an amazing range of flavors, smells, colors, and alcohol content. Today the U.S. market features not only a wide selection of imports but a plethora of American-made beers, many of them very good replications of old-world styles. Twenty years ago, who would have thought that breweries in Cooperstown, New York, and Fort Collins, Colorado, would be producing Belgian ales a monk could be proud of? A classic question for beer weenies—if you had to limit your beer choices to one country, which would it be?—today is pretty easy to answer, since American breweries produce good examples of so many styles.
The beer enlightenment is not limited to the U.S. Canada, the main source of the tasteless stuff I drank in college, nowadays produces several tasty, decidedly un-Moosehead-like varieties. On my last trip to Israel, which traditionally has echoed the American taste for Budweiserish domestic brands and imports, I was pleased to note that several varieties of Leffe are now widely available.
Jackson did not accomplish all this single-handedly, but he played an important role in educating beer drinkers' palates through his books, his articles, and his TV series The Beer Hunter. I have fond memories of watching tapes of The Beer Hunter with friends, sampling different countries' brews (purchased ahead of time at an L.A. liquor store) along with Jackson. Let's raise a glass of tripel to his memory.
Last year in reason, Jay Brooks considered the microbrew revolution as an example of the "long tail" phenomenon.
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You a pirate now, Sullum?
(snark)At least he didn't smoke marijuana.(/snark)
When I was in college, beer choices consisted of Pabst (if money was tight), Molson (the standard), and Moosehood (for special occasions)
Is that where the Moose hang? When I was in college we use to drink Moosehead.
Ayinger Ur Weisse is one of my favorites, but I've never been lucky enough to have it on draft.
Keep a beer notebook. You look a little retarded but it's worth it in the long run, esp. when drinking abroad.
How can you denigrate PBR........a six pack for less than a fiver! C'mon!
With all the microbrews (and some are really good) popping up on the West Coast, I can say with confidence that I will never drink another skunky beer that has been mishandled for 2000 miles before getting to my local store. I can't even say when I last consumed a true import.
They're starting to handle imports better. I've been on a Spaten kick recently, and haven't had a skunk yet.
A copy of The Beer Companion was what introduced me to the idea of seeking out different beer styles. I'd been going for higher-end beer styles for a little while before getting it, but I hadn't known the difference between lager and ale, much less a pale ale and a bitter, nor could I explain what was different between an American pale ale and a British one.
The Beer Companion was responsible for me finding Belgian beers, and lambics in particular. At the time, no belgian beers were to be found in Dallas, at least not anywhere I could find. But the first time I went abroad, I found a lambic, and knew that this was a special find. By now, Belgian beers are a staple for me, despite the attempts by Texas ABC to thwart my interest therein.
When I went to Finnland a few years back, it was Jackson's writing that prompted me to seek out sahtii, the local beer that's an older beer style even than lambic.
His enthusiasm for the craft will be sorely missed.
The east coast of the US is a great place for craft brewers. Victory, Troegs, Stoudts, Weyerbacher, Dogfish Head, Yards, etc. You can tell these guys love all types of beer and have learned their craft well.
I love the perpetuating myth that American beer sucks. It's echoed with pride up here in Canada, where our best-selling brands are completely indistinguishable from Budweiser swill.
I don't doubt the US has the most plentiful and interesting beer selection in the world, but thanks to our province's liquor monopoly, new samples are slow to arrive.
Pvvvvt! Copy Editor to Sullum's office. Pvvt!
This does bring back memories of the 50-cent, 16-oz bottles of Old German on Wednesday nights.
If you are not from Pittsburgh, Old German is the bottom-of-the-keg leftovers from Iron City Beer, which itself is quite horrid.
Cheers!
I love the perpetuating myth that American beer sucks. It's echoed with pride up here in Canada, where our best-selling brands are completely indistinguishable from Budweiser swill.
At this point, Canada should fight Quebecois secession solely based on the fact that the only decent beers exported from Canada are the Unibroue offerings, which are formidable.
Quebec's beer culture is something to be envied, between Unibroue, McAuslan, and the range of wholehearted brewpubs across the province. Dieu Du Ciel, in Montreal, maintains a rotating roster of 10-12 draft beers at any given time (unfortunately, they don't ship or even bottle as of this point).
Ontario's got some respectable operations as well: Black Oak, Cameron's, and Wellington to name a few. Creemore Springs was a near-perfect lager before Molson fucked with it.
I miss the days when drinkers only waxed pretentious about wine.
Well, they've always waxed pretentious about scotch, too.
But now you can be pretentious about not just beer, but vodka, gin, rum, tequila, and god knows what else, not to mention liqueur freaks.
Oh, and don't forget the Knob Creek, Buffalo Trace whathaveyou with the premium bourbons.
" A classic question for beer weenies-if you had to limit your beer choices to one country, which would it be?-today is pretty easy to answer, since American breweries produce good examples of so many styles."
Yeah sure, you wouldn't limit yourself to Germany or Belgium, you would limit yourself to the US.
American Beer may be better than in the past but it's still not that good.
New Belgium Brewing Company - Fort Collins, CO
Home of what I consider the greatest beers in the United States: Fat Tire Amber Ale and 1554 Enlightened Black Ale...mmmmm (Now if only they would ship it out east!?)
I don't doubt the US has the most plentiful and interesting beer selection in the world, but thanks to our province's liquor monopoly, new samples are slow to arrive.
Just thank your lucky stars that you do not still live with pre-1970s Ontario drinking laws.
Life's too short to drink cheap beer.
Just thank your lucky stars that you do not still live with pre-1970s Ontario drinking laws.
All I know about that era is that most LCBOs looked like poorly-lit storehouses, as if to imply "this is how you'll be living if you shop here too often".
As much as he is remembered for his Beer criticism, I feel Michael Jackson's contribution to the popularization of Single Malt Whiskey is even more important. His "Malt Whiskey Companion" was the first real reference work which attempted to delineate (and yes, rate) all the single malts in current production. His 100 point rating scale was always controversial, but his discerning palate was such that you were assured a life-changing experience if you bought one of his rare 90+ point rated whiskeys (after taking off 5 points for anything which was aged in Sherry wood).
As a virtual prisoner of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO), I was not in a privileged position with regard to sampling Scotch, but Mr. Jackson's book opened a window for me on an entire world of incredible flavours.
He was a lovely man in person, with a passion for spreading the gospel of both Beer and Single Malt, and he shall be missed.
There is too much happiness on this thread - I feel the need to piss someone off, so here goes (and I mean it too):
Fat Tire is a lame ass beer. (Heh, I originally typoed "flat tire", which seems much more appropriate)
Possible entries (in no way complete and in no order whatsoever) for best beer in the world:
Bell's Two Hearted Ale
Chimay Grande Reserve
Fuller's ESB
Samuel Smith's Nut Brown Ale
Uerige Doppelsticke Alt (probably my current favorite)
Hacker-Pschorr Oktoberfest
Black Frost (brewed once a year, the 2008 version is about to leave primary fermentor - available only at a New Year's Party near me)
Yeah sure, you wouldn't limit yourself to Germany or Belgium, you would limit yourself to the US.
American Beer may be better than in the past but it's still not that good.
Surely there are some great offerings from either Germany or Belgium. However, neither offers the range of good styles of the US, as near as I can tell. I'd hate to live a life without Celebrator, for example, but of their wheats, only the dark ones are good. I just don't like any of the light German wheats. In fact, the only light wheat style that I like is the Whit style, which is only produced in Belgium and the US.
As for Belgian beers, again, I really enjoy their products, but there are too many styles unavailable from Belgian brewers.
I wouldn't want to have to choose, but if I had to, the US would be very competitive with Belgium or Germany in terms of depth and breadth.
Im will you, lunchstealer. If I could only drink from 1 country, I would drink from the US, because I could drink almost all the World's styles. I would miss out on some great beers, but the dropoff isnt that big.
Heck, lets look at my list above:
Bell's is American
I could replace Chimay with something from Ommegang or New Belgium or Russian River or etc.
SS Nut Brown replace with Goose Island Nut Brown with almost no loss at all.
There are plenty of okay Oktoberfests made in the US.
ESB and Alts are lacking in the US, but do exist, it would bother me but I would be okay.
There aint anything made in England/Belgium/Germany that compares with Arrogant Bastard, for example.
it would bother me but I would be okay.
I would be okay because I homebrew and I would just learn to make a Fuller's and Uerige clone.
MICHAEL JACKSON:
'Cause this is Millllerrr!
Mill-ler Lite!
You know you're gonna drink
Milwaukee's Beast tonight
You know it's Milllllerrr!
Mill-ler Lite!
You're fighting for your life
You're drinking Miller!
Miller!
To-night!
VINCENT PRICE:
Darkness falls across the land
The midnight hour is close at hand
Creatures crawl in search of Bud
To terrorize your neighborhood
And whosoever shall be found
Without a brew for choking down
Must stand and watch romances swell
Among the drunk susceptible
The foulest stench is in the air
The funk of forty thousand beers
And horny folk in every room
Are closing in to seal your doom
And though you fight to not get laid
Your brain's dead, like your liver
For no mere mortal can resist
The evil of ... the Miller!
AH HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA AH ...
Microbrews? Fuck that shit!
Pabst Blue Ribbon!
robc, god damn it, are Zum Uerige beers being imported into the US now? Stupid fucking Texas ABC! Right now you can't get ANY alts in Texas, as near as I can tell.
lunchstealer,
I drink my Uerige's here
lunchstealer,
Their August 2007 bottled beer list doesnt have Zum Uerige on it. I was there Saturday night for german beer fest, didnt have one that night (too many good dunkels and schwarzbiers on tap). But, they were still
available back in July, but my group may have drunk the entire supply that night. 🙂
Frank, I got water already on tap if I want it, when I want a beer I want flavor.
Thomas, Frank Booth
I'd enjoy this post if I weren't an alcoholic.
Ah well. Sometimes I miss beer.
But I don't miss losing jobs and shit.
I have to agree that the US would be the best pick for a single country to drink beer from. There are a lot of styles where specific German or Belgian beers are better, but in most cases, there is something comparable altough not quite as good being produced in the US. In addition, US breweries do innovate more and produce better examples of some styles. I think the best IPAs I've had are all made in the US.
My favorite question to start an argument among beer snobs these days is which is the best of the mass-market US (or Canadian since it's similar stuff) beers?
Foe American Style Lager, my current choice is PBR as it is fairly tart for the style (or de stijl, if you prefer). High Life is second, but a little sweet for my taste.
The only acceptable reason to drink this style, though, is to quench your thirst right after mowing the lawn on a hot day.
de stijl,
The only acceptable reason to drink this style, though, is to quench your thirst right after mowing the lawn on a hot day.
Ive gotta disagree with this.
1. Wouldnt a nice lemonade be a better thirst quencher anyway?
2. If you have to have a lawn mower beer, why not a Saison? or a Hefeweizen? I think a Heneppin (buy American!) after mowing the lawn would do very well.
I was talking strictly mass market. I usually go for a Summit Hefe or Extra Pale Ale when I'm thirsty.
I have PBR or similar a few times a year at most.
des stijl,
Is Summit's Hefe actually a hefe or is it an American wheat like Pyramid or Widmer?
The only thing I may hate more than american crap lagers is american wheats - take a great beer style and deprive it of its driving characteristics, the flavor from the yeast. "Hefes" made from bland american yeast (which are fine for pale ales and etc) is the beer equivalent of a hate crime. And should be punished similarly.
I rarely drink American made wheat beers because of this - there are some good ones out there, but without knowing in advance... I will stick to Weinhenstephaner and Franziskaner and etc.
summer lightning, mmmmm.
ciney brune, mmmmmmmmmmmm.
chimay on tap, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
MattXIV,
Yuengling.
Not mass-market enough? Then I admit I still have a spot in my heart and belly for Genessee Cream Ale.
Who else has an entry in the Cream Ale style?
gorgonzola,
Little Kings?
Thats the only one popping into my head.
I started homebrewing back in the early 80's when "good beer" meant Becks or St. Pauli Girl (same beer, breweries across the street from each other, btw). Over the next 15 years, two things became apparent: 1) You didn't need to brew your own to have great beer anymore thanks to the microbrew revolution, and 2)mass produced American lagers are AMAZING - not,perhaps, in taste and aroma, but in that they are perfectly targeted toward a distinct, well-defined market, they have a distinct and well-defined purpose (ever try to quench your thirst with a Bock beer? Wanna a stout after mowing the lawn?), and, most impressivly, they are PERFECTLY CONSISTENT from batch to batch, brewery to brewery. That is INCREDIBLY difficult to do considering that the qualities of the ingredients used vary from year to year, region to region. It was the American brewing industry that brought science to brewing and it was the complete understanding of this science that allowed the microbrew revolution to happen.
What is great about small American breweries is the degree of experimentation. I've never had anything quite like Ruination Ale, for instance, and although it's really an acquired taste, even by microbrew standards, it really is terrific.
Worst Beer Ever:
Mickey's Wide Mouth.
I have to second Mr. Average on this one. I keep Budweiser around the house for philistines and to cook beer can chicken. The amazing thing about all Anheuser-Busch products to me is the consistency. When I homebrew, I can't make two batches in a row consistent. Bud cranks out enough beer to float an aircraft carrier and it all tastes the same. That's quite the trick.
Mmm... beer. I only get one beer an evening until me and the doctor figure out my liver issues, so it's damn sure gonna be a good one. Right now it's Young's Double Chocolate Stout.
gorgonzola -
Try Sleeman's Cream Ale from Canada - real nice stuff.
Seeing the word Belgium popped up a few times, ( and btw shame on you, don't you know it is the worst profqnity in the universe?).
I thought it might be good to let you guys know that we have THE biggest political crisis here since, well ever...
And that talked is now in the air of the secession of Flanders as a real option.
And frankly, not a minute too soon.
Budweiser is sterile beer. Canned sterility. That makes it the ideal agent to prime racking canes and fill airlocks.
I agree with Mr. Average and T on the amazing ability that Bud's brewers have to brew the same thing consistently. They also supposedly product some kick-ass in house beers.
However, is consistency really a good thing in beer? No one criticizes wines for not being consistent, or bourbon (single barrel anyway).
I found myself at in a tavern on a Sun (usual watering hole was closed) with nothing but AB products available (oh and Stag which I was going to try but the barmaid said it was short for stagnant water) I had an amber-bock and it wasn't terrible.
Otherwise I'd say that AB is able to be so consistent is by limiting the ingredients they use. In fact I think they use only one, and as long as they feed the Clydesdales fresh mountain spring water, that will always be the same.
However, is consistency really a good thing in beer?
Yes.....yes it is. There is a reason the brewmasters at AB and whoever makes PBR these days don't include pigeon droppings, dead rats, and straw from the barn's thatched roof in their beer like those wet-brained Belgian monks do.
American mass produced lager/pilsners are the apogee of the brewmaster's art. Just try ordering a good pilsner from the micro-brewery or making one in your garage.
Yes.....yes it is. There is a reason the brewmasters at AB and whoever makes PBR these days don't include pigeon droppings, dead rats, and straw from the barn's thatched roof in their beer like those wet-brained Belgian monks do.
Thats great SIV. So, now can they stop putting corn and rice in their "pilsners"?
"On my last trip to Israel, which traditionally has echoed the American taste for Budweiserish domestic brands and imports, I was pleased to note that several varieties of Leffe are now widely available."
Do they sell He'Brew, the Chosen Beer?
http://www.shmaltz.com/
"And that talked is now in the air of the secession of Flanders as a real option."
The secession of Flanders will not be permanent. I aready saw that episode. When Homer failed to alert Ned to the porno videos Ned's houseguests were making, Ned finally got fed up and seceded from Springfield. But life in his new town of Humbleton, PA, proved too constricting,and by the end of the episode everything was back to normal again.
I've gotten the Genesis Ale and Messiah Bold at Whole Foods. Good stuff.
That's the problem I have with American "pilsners". I find them too sweet.
As far as I know PBR does not use rice though. I'm not sure about Busch though. If it does have rice it's not nearly as much as Bud.
As far as I know PBR does not use rice though. I'm not sure about Busch though. If it does have rice it's not nearly as much as Bud.
PBR and all non-AB American Macrolagers use corn. A-B uses rice in everything except Michelob, which is an all-malt lager.
And IIRC Busch uses a combo of rice and corn where Bud is purely rice.
My 2 cents on the mass markets is that out of the big 3 brands, the best offering at the mass market price point is probably High Life. I put it slightly above PBR, which has a more distinct taste, but High Life goes down smoother and while it is on the sweet side, it's not cloyingly so like Bud. If you include regional offerings, Point Special is reasonably good. Those 3 are my main fallbacks when I'm at a bar and they don't have anything interesting (or the interesting stuff is overpriced) or for leftovers when buying a 6-pack for beer brats.
Does Blue Moon now count as mass market beer? That might be my favorite.
A year ago, I'd have gone with Rolling Rock, but Anheiser Busch bought it recently and I swear they've messed with the recipe.
My 2 cents on the mass markets is that out of the big 3 brands, the best offering at the mass market price point is probably High Life. I put it slightly above PBR, which has a more distinct taste, but High Life goes down smoother and while it is on the sweet side, it's not cloyingly so like Bud. If you include regional offerings, Point Special is reasonably good. Those 3 are my main fallbacks when I'm at a bar and they don't have anything interesting (or the interesting stuff is overpriced) or for leftovers when buying a 6-pack for beer brats.
High Life FTW! Also, for those of us on the Eastern Seaboard Yuengling is a fine mass-market beer, and the oldest in America.
But for those of us in Richmond, nothing beats a Legend Lager bomber for $2.50. God, I'd love it if mass-market breweries made lager that good!
Yes.....yes it is. There is a reason the brewmasters at AB and whoever makes PBR these days don't include pigeon droppings, dead rats, and straw from the barn's thatched roof in their beer like those wet-brained Belgian monks do.
Its too early in the morning to be craving a Cantillon Gueuze. Damn you, SIV.
Mmmmmm.....horseblankety.
Fat Tire is a lame ass beer.
I must concur.
And I'd be content with limiting my beer selection to the brewpubs in my home town.