nr706 wrote:Cynthia wrote:As for things I don't like: beer ...
Same as the sherry discussion, except on steroids. There are so many beer flavors out there, it's hard to believe anyone couldn't find something in the category to like - fruit beers, aged barley wines ... so many flavors, so little time ...
nr706 wrote:There are so many beer flavors out there, it's hard to believe anyone couldn't find something in the category to like - fruit beers, aged barley wines ... so many flavors, so little time ...
Cynthia wrote:nr706 wrote:Cynthia wrote:As for things I don't like: beer ...
Same as the sherry discussion, except on steroids. There are so many beer flavors out there, it's hard to believe anyone couldn't find something in the category to like - fruit beers, aged barley wines ... so many flavors, so little time ...
Lambic isn't bad. But essentially, the issue with beer is that I don't like hops. I've tried wheat beer, barley beer, cherry beer, light beer, dark beer, but I can still always taste the hops. Lambic is nice because, at least with most flavors, you can't taste hops. Of course, for most beer drinkers, hops are what you're paying for. But they are bitter and linger on the tongue, and I can't stand them. So in this case, it's not really entirely like the sherry discussion, because it's not a matter of having enough options -- it's a matter of getting rid of the ingredient that pretty much defines beer.
Gypsy Boy wrote:All right, I'll 'fess up. I'm not aware of anything I "can't" drink (I had the same experience Ronnie did with Southern Comfort except mine was with tequila and, fortunately, I overcame that, uh, experience). However, given the choice, I won't drink scotch.
I think my first encounter with the vile stuff () was in 1972 when I spent six weeks bumming around Europe with a friend. We had the great good fortune to be picked up hitchhiking one day on an out-of-the-way stretch in northern Scotland by a lawyer in a Jaguar (my first and only time in one o' them). We hit it off and he arranged for us to visit one of his clients: Macallan's. Well, I'd never had scotch before and it's fair to say I hadn't much experience drinking anything with much alcohol in it. Long story short: we were given a private tour of the distillery which ended in the private tasting rooms. There, the director who had given us our tour poured out some samples taken from the barrel. I won't even mention the part where we poured the stuff we hadn't drunk down the sink when he left the room for a moment....
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P.S. Yes, I know that there are many kinds, varieties, and tastes of scotch. The answer is still no.
streets wrote:+1 It tastes like tree bark. The more aged Macallan gets (12 yr, 18yr, etc), the more it tastes like you are sucking on tree bark.
LAZ wrote:And I've yet to find anything that isguises the taste of Malort.
teatpuller wrote:What kind of trees taste like Macallan? I'd like to plant a few in my yard!
nr706 wrote:
Hops don't necessarily define beer. By definition, beer is any beverage produced by fermenting grains or starches. For example, Sake is a rice beer. Chicha is a corn beer. Gruit is a beer made with a variety of herbs, most popular before hops were introduced into the mainstream beer brewing process. Belgians typically (or at least historically) have used aged hops, to minimize the hop flavor, and have used them only for the hops' preservative qualities. A well-aged barley wine (think Thomas Hardy's) will have lost almost all of its hop flavor, in favor of a caramelly, sherry-like sweetness. So, if you're especially sensitive to hops, there are plenty of beer styles - maybe not all easily available - that don't use hops, or minimize hop flavors to the extreme.
If you like, I'll brew a non-hopped beer for you.
Katie wrote:No, not cooking sherry. What exactly is "cooking sherry," anyway? I've seen cooking wines (salt added) in the food aisles of a grocery store, near where the vinegars and salad dressings are shelved. But I don't recall seeing a cooking sherry among those products. In the liquor section or liquor store, sherries are shelved near the ports and marsalas and such. I don't recall seeing any there labelled cooking sherry. I've looked at a couple of different brands other than the one I normally buy to cook with, and the prices all seem reasonable, so I'm unsure whether price is an indication of quality. If "medium dry" is the style I find hard to sip straight, what style might be better for me to try? Or, any recommendations on specific brands?
Cynthia wrote: Perhaps I should have stated that, as far as beers you buy in the beer section of a Binny's or find on tap anywhere that serves the public, at least in English-speaking countries, they all have hops.
Binko wrote:Cynthia wrote: Perhaps I should have stated that, as far as beers you buy in the beer section of a Binny's or find on tap anywhere that serves the public, at least in English-speaking countries, they all have hops.
There's a couple out there you can find, but you're mostly correct. Dogfish Head's Midas Touch is hop-less. The Finnish style called "sahti" (which Goose Island occasionally has on tap) contains little-to-no hops. Its bitter component comes from juniper berries. Plus, there are a couple breweries out there I've seen try to bring back beers bittered with spruce instead of hops. As well, I remember seeing at Binny's some Scottish ale flavored with heather instead of hops. But all these additions add a bit of bitterness to the balance the malt of the brew, so you may not like them anyway. You might enjoy the Midas Touch, though, which also has grapes, honey, and saffron in it.
teatpuller wrote:Tomato Juice
Cogito wrote:teatpuller wrote:Tomato Juice
I love tomato juice, but recently was told by my Dr. to cut down on my salt intake, and it seems like tomato juice is all dosed up with salt. Does anybody know where to find low or no salt tomato juice?
Cynthia wrote:Cogito wrote:teatpuller wrote:Tomato Juice
I love tomato juice, but recently was told by my Dr. to cut down on my salt intake, and it seems like tomato juice is all dosed up with salt. Does anybody know where to find low or no salt tomato juice?
I know they make low-sodium V8 (I bought it once by accident). I'd imagine if they have low-sodium V8, they'd have low-sodium regular tomato juice.
Judy H wrote:You can find it, but you will probably need to add something to make it drinkable --
Cogito wrote:Judy H wrote:You can find it, but you will probably need to add something to make it drinkable --
Where do you find it?
Cogito wrote:teatpuller wrote:Tomato Juice
I love tomato juice, but recently was told by my Dr. to cut down on my salt intake, and it seems like tomato juice is all dosed up with salt. Does anybody know where to find low or no salt tomato juice?
Binko wrote:There's a couple out there you can find, but you're mostly correct. Dogfish Head's Midas Touch is hop-less. The Finnish style called "sahti" (which Goose Island occasionally has on tap) contains little-to-no hops. Its bitter component comes from juniper berries. Plus, there are a couple breweries out there I've seen try to bring back beers bittered with spruce instead of hops. As well, I remember seeing at Binny's some Scottish ale flavored with heather instead of hops. But all these additions add a bit of bitterness to the balance the malt of the brew, so you may not like them anyway. You might enjoy the Midas Touch, though, which also has grapes, honey, and saffron in it.
Cynthia wrote:[ I'm still not convinced I'd like them any better, but it is fascinating to learn that hops area a relative late-comer.