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Mottern Man
03-03-2007, 06:50 PM
How do you take it, warm or cold?

Me, Pilsener and Lagers are cold

Ale and Porter warm.

Am I a weirdo or what?

Htownmmm
03-03-2007, 08:18 PM
Cold and Just(just whenever I can get my hands on one!) :p


Marty

Woknblues
03-03-2007, 09:57 PM
define warm, doc.

If you mean something like "cellar temperature", say around 60-65 degrees, I would agree...

However, if you are going any higher in temperature, I might classify you as "unusual". Weirdo is way to judgmental! To each his own!

I usually bring out my ales before I drink them, lagers go from fridge to belly without any time in between. ;)

Mottern Man
03-03-2007, 11:37 PM
Room Temp.

Not Saki warm :rofl

BTW That is the same thing that happens too my lagers..........odd :D ::

Kingpepper
03-04-2007, 01:55 AM
Ice cold Bud.

Paul

peacefrog
03-04-2007, 11:01 AM
The reason why Budweiser encourages you to drink its beer ice cold is so you can't taste it. The colder something is the less you can taste. It can be instructive to take a good beer out of the fridge and drink it little by little as it warms. You'll find different flavors come out at different temperatures.

_JP_
03-04-2007, 01:14 PM
Budweiser advertising is based in part on the taste of their product. That product is designed to taste best when cold, which is how most of the American public prefers to drink beer (and other carbonated beverages). But there is a growing segment of that population that is learning about other beers and how to appreciate them.

Scorpio
03-04-2007, 07:25 PM
Guiness at cellar temp anything else is uncivilized:D

Raf

Edcculus
03-04-2007, 08:44 PM
Party beer = cold

homebrew beer = warmer

Mama Bear
03-04-2007, 09:13 PM
I drink none of the 'Budweiser' type beers, I honestly just don't like them, but a good pale ale or stout makes me a very happy woman... and I always drink them at room temp.. they don't taste as good when they are cold..

rick
03-04-2007, 10:32 PM
define warm, doc.

If you mean something like "cellar temperature", say around 60-65 degrees, I would agree...



Me too.
Not "warm" tho. Warm to me is 75-80 deg.
My outside fridge is where I store beer and wine.
Set to somewhere around 50 Deg. After I open one in a few minutes it's just aboot right for me.

qhsdoitall
03-05-2007, 02:19 PM
Cellar temp unless it's an American mega-company beer. Then it's cold, cold, cold please.

ada8356
03-05-2007, 03:33 PM
Always cold... I'm not in it for the taste so much anyway.;)

moviemaniac
03-05-2007, 03:41 PM
I don't know, but I just don't like those beers from the big companies (Budweiser, Beck's and the likes). I enjoy the products from many small, local (or national) breweries that offer superb quality and distinctive tastes and not those tasteless, chemically infested party-brews.
I'm kinda lucky to live in a country where beer is associated with a whole culture of brewing and many, many different breweries. We also get many great German (Bavarian) and Czech beers here, we're actually in beer-paradise, quality-wise. ::

I'll drink a Baumgartner (http://www.brauerei-baumgartner.at) to that :eatdrink047

Oh, about temperature: cellar-cold it shall be.

Lynchmeister
03-09-2007, 11:55 AM
I like all of my beer colder rather than warmer, but as so duly noted above, those are pretty subjective terms. For lagers, I like them cold and straight from the fridge. For ales, which I'm just beginning to re-accquaint myself with, I like to go from the fridge and into a pint glass for a minute or two (I liken it to resting a steak, lol) before I enjoy it.

Last night I tried a Goose Island Honker's Ale, which was not bad at all!

peacefrog
03-09-2007, 06:03 PM
Last night I tried a Goose Island Honker's Ale, which was not bad at all!

Ah, Goose Island! That brings back fond memories of my Chicago days. I haven't been there in years, but they made some ungodly good beers there.

Lynchmeister
03-16-2007, 03:39 PM
Ah, Goose Island! That brings back fond memories of my Chicago days. I haven't been there in years, but they made some ungodly good beers there.

+1 The Honkers was definately good, so now I'll have to try their nut brown ale. ::