By the time TG gets down here these days they're all shelf turded- haven't seen any remotely fresh Sue of any kind in a year
jetch17 said:
By the time TG gets down here these days they're all shelf turded- haven't seen any remotely fresh Sue of any kind in a year
Jock 07 said:jetch17 said:
By the time TG gets down here these days they're all shelf turded- haven't seen any remotely fresh Sue of any kind in a year
I've noticed that here in CO as well. Bout the best you find is 2 month old stuff but that seems rare
steve00 said:
End of an era. I haven't been to Societe Brewing in a month or so, but since then the city has shut down their parking lot beer garden. Since 2020 they have had around 20 tables set up in the former main parking lot. Now it is repainted and back to a parking lot and they only have 4 patio tables outside. Sucks since sitting outside there in the afternoon is awesome.
fav13andac1)c said:
A little (overcarbonated) homebrewed IPA. It's so fluffy!!
Jock 07 said:
I'm at the in-laws in Georgetown. Can't recall if I've asked here before but any breweries worth checking out around here or maybe round rock? Might head down to jester king Tuesday afternoon. Barking armadillo looks like it could be interesting
swampstander said:
Homebrew Dark Mild I brewed a week ago today. Served on "cask". Quite quaffable at 3.6%.
I look at it like fishing or hunting. No one goes hunting to save money on red meat. It's about enjoyment of the process. I currently have 5 beers on tap.HECUBUS said:
Used to have three (homebrew) beers on tap 24/7/365. Back when stainless soda kegs were $5 and glass carboys were free. We still have all the gear for all grain brewing, but you can no longer get the ingredients for a cost of one dollar a gallon of beer. It seems pointless to do all the work when you can buy it for the same price as making it.
sounds like you were in it for the wrong reasons all along.HECUBUS said:
Used to have three (homebrew) beers on tap 24/7/365. Back when stainless soda kegs were $5 and glass carboys were free. We still have all the gear for all grain brewing, but you can no longer get the ingredients for a cost of one dollar a gallon of beer. It seems pointless to do all the work when you can buy it for the same price as making it.
well.. I'm also now pretty much paying $8 for 12oz pours of typical beers at breweries as well. when I started homebrewing a pint of craft was $3.HECUBUS said:
Completely wrong. We were in it for the beer. It's difficult not to notice the price for ingredients has gone up 10x. Why do you feel the need to manufacture a false narrative?
It was much different two decades ago. We could go to St. Patrick's home brew supply and find everything we needed. It was a lot of fun. We built recirculating mash systems, put temperature controllers on freezers to make lagers, etc. We never bought kits. We might have spent the same amount, but we were always upgrading the equipment.
Uhh did he not bring you any New Glarus?swampstander said:
Buddy from Wisconsin brought me this. It's aight. Tastes a lot like corn flakes.
swampstander said:
Buddy from Wisconsin brought me this. It's aight. Tastes a lot like corn flakes.
Jock 07 said:
First time stopping by here, not too bad. Set up kind of reminds me of third window in Santa Barbara for some reason.
My HEB started off pretty good at pulling in a good selection of beers, including those newly distributed in our area. Now they're mostly back to Texas, and especially, Houston area beers. I'm guessing they just weren't selling.jetch17 said:
By the time TG gets down here these days they're all shelf turded- haven't seen any remotely fresh Sue of any kind in a year