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General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: MasterWolf1 on January 06, 2008, 12:46:18 PM

Title: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: MasterWolf1 on January 06, 2008, 12:46:18 PM
Which you like more?

Despite Chaim's thinking of tea I hate tea  unless its iced.   But I love coffee both hot and iced.  And on a hot day a cold small bottle of soda or beer is nice too.


Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 06, 2008, 07:05:24 PM
A small bottle of Beer on a hot day is refreshing imo. ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 06, 2008, 07:11:41 PM
A small bottle of Beer on a hot day is refreshing imo. ;)

Small? Large  :::D

Coffee is always first  O0 then Beer, then if theres nothing left to drink tea.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 06, 2008, 09:32:16 PM
hmmm.. maybe Large ;D
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 06, 2008, 10:00:21 PM
hmmm.. maybe Large ;D
;D :::D
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 06, 2008, 10:17:09 PM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 06, 2008, 11:42:33 PM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .

Irish coffee ^-^

Now we are talking  :::D
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 06, 2008, 11:44:56 PM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .

Irish coffee ^-^

Now we are talking  :::D

You like Whisky ?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 06, 2008, 11:45:24 PM
that's good ;D
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: kellymaureen on January 06, 2008, 11:53:13 PM
Green tea, iced only
In the summer an Alexander Keiths ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 06, 2008, 11:55:43 PM
sounds good ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Joe Schmo on January 06, 2008, 11:58:31 PM
Coffee, Beer, tea?

I love them all!
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 12:05:56 AM
Origin
(http://[img]http://www.dunelmhygieneproducts.com/USERIMAGES/Irish%20Coffee.jpg)[/img]
(http://openclipart.org/people/pipo/pipo_italian_coffee_maker.png)
(http://[img]http://www.exquisine.de/net/artikel/bilder/amaretto.jpg)[/img]
(http://sebbad.files.wordpress.com/2007/04/limoncello.jpg)
(http://www.cs.unm.edu/~patrik/westmalle.jpg)
(http://files.splinder.com/673010c8071d6aded80654816669a480.jpeg)
(http://blog.grandsbordeaux.com/public/Yquem99.jpg)
(http://www.manageyourcellar.com/winecellar/winecellar/assets/images/labels/sauternes.jpg)
(http://[img]http://www.dkimages.com/discover/previews/760/442374.JPG)[/img]
(http://www.henrikibsen.com/var/rosmersholm05_1/storage/images/media/images/h_ibsen_products/717-1-eng-GB/h_ibsen_products.jpg)

(http://www.spirituosenworld.de/produkte/scotch/details/oban_gr.jpg)
(http://www.whiskymerchants.co.uk/communities/9/004/005/976/859/images/4515981140.jpg)


The original Irish coffee was invented by Joseph Sheridan, a head chef at Foynes, County Limerick.
May God bless him.

Foynes' port was the precursor to Shannon International Airport in the west of Ireland; the coffee was conceived after a group of American passengers disembarked at the airport on a miserable winter evening in the 1940s. Sheridan decided to add some whiskey to the coffee to warm the passengers. After being asked if they were being served Brazilian coffee, Sheridan told the passengers that it was Irish coffee[1].
Stanton Delaplane, travel writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, claimed to have brought Irish coffee to the United States when he convinced the Buena Vista bar in San Francisco to start serving Irish coffee on November 10, 1952.[1]
However, since around or before that date the beverage has been served at Tom Bergin's Tavern in Los Angeles, where a large sign reading "House of Irish Coffee" has been in place since the early 1950s.[2]
[edit]Preparation



A mug of Baileys coffee
Black coffee is poured into the mug;
Whiskey and at least one level teaspoon of sugar is stirred in until fully dissolved. The sugar is essential for floating liquid cream on top.[3]
Thick cream is carefully poured over the back of a spoon initially held just above the surface of the coffee and gradually raised a little. The layer of cream will float on the coffee without mixing. The coffee is drunk through the layer of cream.
[edit]Variations

Whipped cream rather than thick liquid cream is sometimes used, although contrary to the original recipe; it is easier to drop a dollop of whipped cream in or even spray it from a can than to float liquid cream, and it will float even if the coffee is made without sugar. The experience of drinking the coffee through the floating cream is lost.
In Spain a "Café Irlandés" ("Irish Coffee") is sometimes served with a bottom layer of whiskey, a separate coffee layer, and a layer of cream on top[2]. Special devices are sold for making Café Irlandés.
Variants of Irish coffee are made, all essentially the same but with different names and using a different spirit. This list will never be hard and fast, as any bar can serve such a drink and call it by any name they choose.
Scotch or Gaelic coffee; using Scotch whisky
Bonnie Prince Charlie coffee; using Drambuie
Kentucky coffee with Bourbon whiskey
French coffee; using brandy or cognac
Calypso or Caribbean or Jamaican coffee; using dark rum or sometimes, Tia Maria
Russian coffee; using vodka
Mexican coffee; using tequila
Hasselt coffee; using jenever
Kahlua coffee with Kahlua coffee liqueur
Baileys coffee with Baileys Irish Cream
Spanish coffee; using sherry
Butte, MT version: coffee, Irish Cream, Irish Whiskey. Catholic of course.
and many others
The cocktail known as "Dutch coffee" is hot black coffee with sugar and advocaat stirred in.
A small cup of strong coffee is sometimes drunk with a shot of alcoholic spirits (brandy, grappa, marc) and without cream or milk, but these are quite different from Irish coffee.
Thick cream can be floated on sweetened coffee without the addition of alcohol, instead of being stirred in.
[edit]
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 07, 2008, 01:05:32 AM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .

Irish coffee ^-^

Now we are talking  :::D

You like Whisky ?

Old Mill the finest Ireland has.

I prefer single malt at least 12 years.

Blended has its place but not in my glass.

Straight up with a slash of water  ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 01:06:33 AM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .

Irish coffee ^-^

Now we are talking  :::D

You like Whisky ?

Old Mill the finest Ireland has.

I prefer single malt at least 12 years.

Blended has its place but not in my glass.

Straight up with a slash of water  ;)

Great. Exactly what i like . Only single malt
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 07, 2008, 01:08:27 AM
I like coffee.
Especially Belgian Coffee.
Or Irish Coffee.

I like some teas. Especially some tea called ayurvedic .

Irish coffee ^-^

Now we are talking  :::D

You like Whisky ?

Old Mill the finest Ireland has.

I prefer single malt at least 12 years.

Blended has its place but not in my glass.

Straight up with a slash of water  ;)

Great. Exactly what i like . Only single malt

Ambiorix indeed you are a very fine fellow  ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 01:52:41 AM
Yes he is O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: MasterWolf1 on January 07, 2008, 02:25:54 PM
Not too many American beers are good unfortunatly the only good one is Sam Adams

I think Bud and Coors are so watered down

Also as an Italian I can promote this,, wine
A glass each day of red wine is great for your heart,  after my uncle had his heart surgery, his cardio told him a glass of red every day just one helps lower your b.p and is good for your heart
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 04:34:03 PM
Not too many American beers are good unfortunatly the only good one is Sam Adams

I think Bud and Coors are so watered down

Also as an Italian I can promote this,, wine
A glass each day of red wine is great for your heart,  after my uncle had his heart surgery, his cardio told him a glass of red every day just one helps lower your b.p and is good for your heart

Yes, I don't like American Beers Sam Adams one's aren't bad the flavored box pack you can buy. O0

Wine is great for your heart, better than beer. O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 07, 2008, 04:54:40 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 08:12:49 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 07, 2008, 08:45:11 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0

Beer is good but not my favorite tickle  ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 09:12:04 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0

Beer is good but not my favorite tickle  ;)


Please, find one of these :
Westmalle, Chimay, Rochefort, Orval.

They are brewed by monks.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Kiwi on January 07, 2008, 09:27:16 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0

Beer is good but not my favorite tickle  ;)


Please, find one of these :
Westmalle, Chimay, Rochefort, Orval.

They are brewed by monks.

I will look but I am a spirit drinker mainly.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:08:09 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0

Beer is good but not my favorite tickle  ;)


Please, find one of these :
Westmalle, Chimay, Rochefort, Orval.

They are brewed by monks.

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Beer was invented in Belgium O0

I also like Czech Budvar beer O0

Paulaner also a monk beer is pretty good Hefe-Weizen. ;)

Do they have Hefe-Weizen Beers in Belgium, Ambiorix?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:15:34 PM
I like Aussie beer, but New Zealand beer is the best  ;)

Never tried it, my favorite are the German ones, followed by Belgium. O0

You know beer was created in Belgium O0

Beer is good but not my favorite tickle  ;)


Please, find one of these :
Westmalle, Chimay, Rochefort, Orval.

They are brewed by monks.

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Beer was invented in Belgium O0

I also like Czech Budvar beer O0

Paulaner also a monk beer is pretty good Hefe-Weizen. ;)

Do they have Hefe-Weizen Beers in Belgium, Ambiorix?

I never heard about it.

Czechs invented Pils (it is a Czech city).

We do almost never drink German or French beers.

I am very xenophobic about beers.
I only like what comes from Belgium, or from the Flemish territories the French stole from us.
Wine i only drink from France.
Spain and italy can be good as well.
But i never buy them.

Wine from South-America i never buy, because i hate to support their anti-USA dictatorships.

There is only one exception , that is Cuban cigars.
Although there are alternatives, i am working to find out if the regimes there are supporting socialism or not.



Only Danish, some English, and god forbid : dutch Heiniken, but that only in case of emergency.
Czech beer is too expensive, but it tastes very nice.

Austrian Pils is good as well , Hungarian too. Russian is not good or bad.

I never had the opportunity to drink


Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:23:25 PM
"Austrian Pils is good as well , Hungarian too. Russian is not good or bad."

Austrian Pils is very good O0

In terms of Nazi KKKraut beers, just the German Hefe-Weizen beers which were before WWII, but famous Nazis drank them so I'm in trouble >:(

Is there an oldest brewery in Belgium? ???

I only heard about the oldest brewery in Germany, but I'm not sure? ???

Beer was invented in Belgium, but I read somewhere that the oldest brewery is in Germany? ???
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:25:45 PM
the problem with our beers, is that a major beer brewery , Jupiler - Interbrew,
is becoming the biggest beer multinational in the world for beers.

Now they are called InBev.

the German beer (Hefe-Weizen) you mentioned is probably the same taste as this one, although , this beer I do not recommend, the taste is not comparable with the taste it had 10 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoegaarden_Brewery

the brewery was closed this year after 700 years of presence in the village of Hoegaarden, (pronounce "hoe" like "who", "gaarden" like "garden")
They moved it to produce in another plant in Wallonia....


after three months, the production there was stopped, as the beer was impossible to brew there!


Now production returned to the town of Hoegaarden.

Note: this beer is popular in Denmark.

The people there think the beer is Danish, as HOEGAARDEN is an old way of writing HØGAARDEN....
So they think it is a medieval Danish Beer....

The people i talked too in the caffees over there were astonished to see i was right ...
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:29:46 PM
the problem with our beers, is that a major beer brewery , Jupiler - Interbrew,
is becoming the biggest beer multinational in the world for beers.

Now they are called InBev.

the German beer (Hefe-Weizen) you mentioned is probably the same taste as this one, although , this beer I do not recommend, the taste is not comparable with the taste it had 10 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoegaarden_Brewery

the brewery was closed this year after 700 years of presence in the village of Hoegaarden, (pronounce "hoe" like "who", "gaarden" like "garden")
They moved it to produce in another plant in Wallonia....


after three months, the production there was stopped, as the beer was impossible to brew there!


Now production returned to the town of Hoegaarden.

Note: this beer is popular in Denmark.

The people there think the beer is Danish, as HOEGAARDEN is an old way of writing HØGAARDEN....
So they think it is a medieval Danish Beer....

The people i talked too in the caffees over there were astonished to see i was right ...

I like Hoegaarden that's very good O0

but I can't say much about it 10 years ago, because I don't know how it would taste then

I can't imagine how good it must have tasted 10 years ago on tap O0 O0 O0 O0

Interesting, I didn't know about the Danish spelling of the Hoegaarden beer to HØGAARDEN

The Danes must like it. ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:39:55 PM
"Austrian Pils is good as well , Hungarian too. Russian is not good or bad."

Austrian Pils is very good O0

In terms of Nazi KKKraut beers, just the German Hefe-Weizen beers which were before WWII, but famous Nazis drank them so I'm in trouble >:(

Is there an oldest brewery in Belgium? ???

I only heard about the oldest brewery in Germany, but I'm not sure? ???

Beer was invented in Belgium, but I read somewhere that the oldest brewery is in Germany? ???

Make no mistake in terms of support of nazism and anti-semitism, the Austrians were worse than the most of the Germans.
Hitler was an Austrian (!)

anyway, I do understand  most people who are against Germany, don't buy products from there, but in Belgium, that's not really possible to do.
I mean nearly 30% of what you buy in the shops here is produced in Germany.
i prefer to keep money in Europa/Euro-Russia, than i give it to the Chinese.

As far as I find Belgian products that are better than German, i buy Belgian.
French are more an enemy of the Flemish people during the centuries ( They stole the south of Flanders!).
And the Spanish should be eradicated from the planet for what they did with us...

So i definitely boycott Spanish products. Oh no,.... i have Spanish olive oil,... And i don't want French or Morakkkan....

Help what is the best Israeli or Greek / Italian olive oil/wine?

And by the way, not all the French are enemies, the north of the country are very sympathetic to us...
We buy truckloads of their Champaign/Burgundy wines ( some neighbouring region Alsace used to be under our control in the 1400-1500, with dual capitals Dijon-Brugge)

anyway, the beer tradition of the monks , is just inherited from the druids I suppose, so i guess the oldest beers are gone by now...

But the oldest known belgian beer, that still exists, i don't know

Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:40:45 PM
the problem with our beers, is that a major beer brewery , Jupiler - Interbrew,
is becoming the biggest beer multinational in the world for beers.

Now they are called InBev.

the German beer (Hefe-Weizen) you mentioned is probably the same taste as this one, although , this beer I do not recommend, the taste is not comparable with the taste it had 10 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoegaarden_Brewery

the brewery was closed this year after 700 years of presence in the village of Hoegaarden, (pronounce "hoe" like "who", "gaarden" like "garden")
They moved it to produce in another plant in Wallonia....


after three months, the production there was stopped, as the beer was impossible to brew there!


Now production returned to the town of Hoegaarden.

Note: this beer is popular in Denmark.

The people there think the beer is Danish, as HOEGAARDEN is an old way of writing HØGAARDEN....
So they think it is a medieval Danish Beer....

The people i talked too in the caffees over there were astonished to see i was right ...

I like Hoegaarden that's very good O0

but I can't say much about it 10 years ago, because I don't know how it would taste then

I can't imagine how good it must have tasted 10 years ago on tap O0 O0 O0 O0

Interesting, I didn't know about the Danish spelling of the Hoegaarden beer to HØGAARDEN

The Danes must like it. ;)
well Høgaarden is the modern way to write hoegaarden.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:43:30 PM
the problem with our beers, is that a major beer brewery , Jupiler - Interbrew,
is becoming the biggest beer multinational in the world for beers.

Now they are called InBev.

the German beer (Hefe-Weizen) you mentioned is probably the same taste as this one, although , this beer I do not recommend, the taste is not comparable with the taste it had 10 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoegaarden_Brewery

the brewery was closed this year after 700 years of presence in the village of Hoegaarden, (pronounce "hoe" like "who", "gaarden" like "garden")
They moved it to produce in another plant in Wallonia....


after three months, the production there was stopped, as the beer was impossible to brew there!


Now production returned to the town of Hoegaarden.

Note: this beer is popular in Denmark.

The people there think the beer is Danish, as HOEGAARDEN is an old way of writing HØGAARDEN....
So they think it is a medieval Danish Beer....

The people i talked too in the caffees over there were astonished to see i was right ...

I like Hoegaarden that's very good O0

but I can't say much about it 10 years ago, because I don't know how it would taste then

I can't imagine how good it must have tasted 10 years ago on tap O0 O0 O0 O0

Interesting, I didn't know about the Danish spelling of the Hoegaarden beer to HØGAARDEN

The Danes must like it. ;)
well Høgaarden is the modern way to write hoegaarden.

ok O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:44:17 PM
the problem with our beers, is that a major beer brewery , Jupiler - Interbrew,
is becoming the biggest beer multinational in the world for beers.

Now they are called InBev.

the German beer (Hefe-Weizen) you mentioned is probably the same taste as this one, although , this beer I do not recommend, the taste is not comparable with the taste it had 10 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoegaarden_Brewery

the brewery was closed this year after 700 years of presence in the village of Hoegaarden, (pronounce "hoe" like "who", "gaarden" like "garden")
They moved it to produce in another plant in Wallonia....


after three months, the production there was stopped, as the beer was impossible to brew there!


Now production returned to the town of Hoegaarden.

Note: this beer is popular in Denmark.

The people there think the beer is Danish, as HOEGAARDEN is an old way of writing HØGAARDEN....
So they think it is a medieval Danish Beer....

The people i talked too in the caffees over there were astonished to see i was right ...

I like Hoegaarden that's very good O0

but I can't say much about it 10 years ago, because I don't know how it would taste then

I can't imagine how good it must have tasted 10 years ago on tap O0 O0 O0 O0

Interesting, I didn't know about the Danish spelling of the Hoegaarden beer to HØGAARDEN

The Danes must like it. ;)


Do yourself a favour and drink a Westmalle Tripel.

Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:51:34 PM
Is it on this site http://www.mdv-beer.com/pages/5_breweries/westmalle_beers.html

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Do they import at all?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:53:16 PM
Is it on this site http://www.mdv-beer.com/pages/5_breweries/westmalle_beers.html

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Do they import at all?
it is exported .
Where do you live ?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:54:04 PM
Is it on this site http://www.mdv-beer.com/pages/5_breweries/westmalle_beers.html

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Do they import at all?
it is exported .
Where do you live ?

The U.S.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:54:43 PM
Is it on this site http://www.mdv-beer.com/pages/5_breweries/westmalle_beers.html

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Do they import at all?
it is exported .
Where do you live ?

The U.S.

Check where you can get beers.

Maybe ?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:55:25 PM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:55:29 PM
Is it on this site http://www.mdv-beer.com/pages/5_breweries/westmalle_beers.html

Will do so Ambiorix O0

Do they import at all?
it is exported .
Where do you live ?

The U.S.

Check where you can get beers.

Maybe ?

Ok O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 07, 2008, 11:56:06 PM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 07, 2008, 11:58:19 PM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0

seriously, don't you find any shop where you live?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 08, 2008, 12:29:42 AM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0

seriously, don't you find any shop where you live?

Well, most shops don't if I go to store well known for beverages I'll look next time ;)
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 08, 2008, 12:36:04 AM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0

seriously, don't you find any shop where you live?

Well, most shops don't if I go to store well known for beverages I'll look next time ;)

Well if you don't find the real good beers, you can try some mass-products:
Such as Leffe, Duvel, Stella Artois.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 08, 2008, 12:44:36 AM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0

seriously, don't you find any shop where you live?

Well, most shops don't if I go to store well known for beverages I'll look next time ;)

Well if you don't find the real good beers, you can try some mass-products:
Such as Leffe, Duvel, Stella Artois.

I've tried Stella Artois, but not Leffe, or Duvel?

Are Leffe and Duvel pretty good?
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 08, 2008, 01:23:01 AM
We have about 5 pubs with 300+ beers over here!!

Excellent O0

Maybe if I'm over there sometime I'll join you ;) O0

seriously, don't you find any shop where you live?

Well, most shops don't if I go to store well known for beverages I'll look next time ;)

Well if you don't find the real good beers, you can try some mass-products:
Such as Leffe, Duvel, Stella Artois.

I've tried Stella Artois, but not Leffe, or Duvel?

Are Leffe and Duvel pretty good?

You should try them. if you like them, start enjoying some other Belgian beers.

The thing is, in the beginning, people like the sweet-sugarry beers over the real thing.
You have to learn to appreciate the bitterness in beer.

When it comes to bitterness/sweet I think Leffe is too commercial in taste. duvel is like a pils, it has been filtered , but has 9% alcohol.
it is a beer i dislike, because it is not honest. that's why it is called Duvel / Devil.
I think it is better to stick with the beers that monks brew in the abbeys.
Only <<trappist>> beers are authentic, all <abbey beers> are forgeries.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: MasterWolf1 on January 08, 2008, 01:35:55 AM
I also like Canadian beer, Molson Labatts is not watered down and its drinkable that you don't get the eww beer face from some beers
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: Ambiorix on January 08, 2008, 01:39:19 AM
I also like Canadian beer, Molson Labatts is not watered down and its drinkable that you don't get the eww beer face from some beers

In 1991, Labatt was acquired by the large Belgian multinational brewer InBev (then Interbrew), the world market leader.
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: JTFFan on January 08, 2008, 01:46:26 AM
I also like Canadian beer, Molson Labatts is not watered down and its drinkable that you don't get the eww beer face from some beers

Yes, that's a good beer
Title: Re: Beer (legal age) Coffee, tea
Post by: qwerty on January 18, 2008, 10:10:48 AM
Well when I was in Italy. I had me some Havana Club Rum. Rum is the only liquor i'll drink. too bad you cant get that stuff here in America. It is soo good.
I also like Green Tea. Oriental foods are the best. its no wonder they live so long