It’s common to disparage light beers. As craft beers have elbowed their way into American refrigerators and taps, light beers have become punch lines. What few drinkers know, however, is that quality light beers are incredibly difficult to brew. The thin flavor means there’s little to mask defects in the more than 800 chemical compounds within. As Kyler Serfass, manager of the home-brew supply shop Brooklyn Homebrew, told me, “Light beer is a brewer’s beer. It may be bland, but it’s really tough to do.” Belgian monks and master brewers around the world marvel at how macro-breweries like Anheuser-Busch InBev and MillerCoors have perfected the process in hundreds of factories, ensuring that every pour from every brewery tastes exactly the same. Staring at a bottle, it’s staggering to consider the effort that goes into producing each ounce of the straw-colored liquid. But perhaps the most impressive thing about light beer isn’t the time needed or the craftsmanship or even the consistency, but how many lives the beverage has saved.
For Brooklyn Homebrew’s Kyler Serfass, it took three months of experimentation to crack the code using an old refrigerator he discovered in the basement of his apartment building. “When I saw that fridge, it was like a light shone down from heaven,” he said. Serfass made only two cases’ worth of his “Budweiser clone,” but the duplication was considered such an achievement that it won him a gold medal at this year’s Homebrew Alley competition, held at the Brooklyn Brewery.
TomInSkokie wrote:I've been trying to figure out how Miller Lite won a gold medal at the Great American Beer Festival in 2010 and then a silver medal this year. Maybe this article helps explain it.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I saw this story at mentalfloss.com and thought it was pretty interesting . . .It’s common to disparage light beers. As craft beers have elbowed their way into American refrigerators and taps, light beers have become punch lines. What few drinkers know, however, is that quality light beers are incredibly difficult to brew. The thin flavor means there’s little to mask defects in the more than 800 chemical compounds within. As Kyler Serfass, manager of the home-brew supply shop Brooklyn Homebrew, told me, “Light beer is a brewer’s beer. It may be bland, but it’s really tough to do.” Belgian monks and master brewers around the world marvel at how macro-breweries like Anheuser-Busch InBev and MillerCoors have perfected the process in hundreds of factories, ensuring that every pour from every brewery tastes exactly the same. Staring at a bottle, it’s staggering to consider the effort that goes into producing each ounce of the straw-colored liquid. But perhaps the most impressive thing about light beer isn’t the time needed or the craftsmanship or even the consistency, but how many lives the beverage has saved.
Scientific Reasons to Respect Light Beer
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deesher wrote:Less filling!
ronnie_suburban wrote:deesher wrote:Less filling!
Tastes great!
jmc wrote:A lot of (respected) brewers I know really enjoy lighter styles and have a great deal of respect for them.