![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTpyB4xdFqbZH-2hH3pEYd_StJ3Sp-ggOAdw4QcAcrG0X7oqigQ0WMCGBD4hxpHUmxmBwSI3pnRJwO7iWSbh13-zO4JcwwqR6WypXWVfXcQIB026TTmQkZE_xKkArtuU8NXxDKcARqwyZe/s320/mad-anthony-gabby-blonde-lager.jpg)
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Mad Anthony Brewing Company Gabby Blonde Lager
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTpyB4xdFqbZH-2hH3pEYd_StJ3Sp-ggOAdw4QcAcrG0X7oqigQ0WMCGBD4hxpHUmxmBwSI3pnRJwO7iWSbh13-zO4JcwwqR6WypXWVfXcQIB026TTmQkZE_xKkArtuU8NXxDKcARqwyZe/s320/mad-anthony-gabby-blonde-lager.jpg)
Friday, May 27, 2011
Three Floyds Pride and Joy Mild Ale
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhlmFVQXKuFaOzKHsXTc42dBgKyg9cncWy0bVT2HYbzuu-8NgpmGQZVPSjG0VtBIvAEEemOcgdgyKkrdJQ0fdkQCp9L0CC9prcbauo29XSYC_WVc-pxJUbBPmkFO4B2M69TCc1ucAPCpEMF/s320/three-floyds-pride-and-joy-21351949.jpg)
Horse Piss Beer
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPZS_b351T5ueR-y_8DItoNKxqzoNtCiRtLfiiqvFUq3QDnmMy9hZ8XCvSxpEOPtUH8zB93GqaW_7xwi1Y9BBJTyB0HmDJH1eH-W8Aokx2t6jvf3obArf6fo0bS_fhKGJwDVaoFbvwswxD/s320/horse.jpg)
Samuel Smith's Nut Brown Ale
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi2ddIkzjV707GBQr-I7le7HQMacLP4OqBQo5hsLeofc8_9v83t9kJVQRFeoXc9GPs2qHb5PO_jUdiCO622lXd1GRm1Yv2_-mycD9UCaPwxvqqYSAJsjmGrV9eOYiu6R6lBeF6mk7TUICgg/s320/nut-brown-ale1.jpg)
Wow, that was some season of Celebrity Apprentice! In a day and age when so few things in the world ever live up to expectations, Gary Busey never fails to come through. You hope for crazy, he gives you beyond crazy. You expect a guy living on his own planet, and you get a guy living in his own galaxy. But who knew that freaking Meat Loaf would be even more of a train wreck?! When he wasn’t sobbing like a baby, he was spewing obscenities and threatening to rip people’s heads off. It was pure awesomeness. In no other avenue of life can a man behave in such a manner and have his boss continually respond merely by saying, “He’s got a lot of passion.” I don’t care for the man’s music, but he can be on my reality TV show any day. Yep, I’m planning my own show. It will be called Josh’s Next Favorite Beer. It will be a competition show, of course, and every week I’ll eliminate a different beer until I find my elusive favorite beer. If this doesn’t sound like something that could ever be green-lit by the TV industry, I’ll just take Meat Loaf with me to the pitch meetings and have him scream at the network executives until they relent. Should he become unavailable due to a sudden crying jag, I will have Busey waiting in reserve.
Honestly, it really bothers me that I’ve never found a “favorite” beer. For whatever reason, I just can’t commit. And that is so unlike me! I am not a fence-sitter. I can easily name a favorite color (blue), TV show (Sopranos), and meal (bangers and mash). When I met my wife, I knew right off that no other woman would ever again have a chance with me. I’ve had a favorite band (The Clash) since I was in my mid-20s. I’ve had a favorite writer (Kurt Vonnegut) since high school. When it comes to pro sports, I’ve been a diehard Philly guy all my life. But when it comes to beer, I just haven’t found “the one”. You know what I mean: a year-round, every day go-to brew. A beer I would buy by the case and have in my fridge at all times. A beer that would be my beer. Most of the beers I rate the highest are not serious candidates. Founders Breakfast Stout is purely a winter delight, and even then something I only drink a few times a month. At $70 a case, Victory’s Baltic Thunder is way out of the running. Samuel Adams Boston Lager merits consideration, but is a tad too aggressively hopped to be “my” beer. My primary beer goal, for so long, has been to play the field and sample all the many varieties the brewing world has to offer. But now I need to get serious and find the one. It’s time to stop being superficial and start really getting to know the beers I drink. I don’t want to buy singles all the time. I need to buy more six-packs. I need to buy more cases.
While I haven’t yet identified my beer, I know a thing or two about what it will be like. It will be dark. It will be smooth. It will be balanced, but it will be more malty than hoppy. Once I get my reality show in production, I’ll invite a couple of old standbys like Bell’s Porter and Warsteiner Premium Dunkel into the competition. Then there will be some new contenders, and Samuel Smith’s Nut Brown Ale will be one of them for sure. The only thing this astonishingly delicious beer has going against it is that it’s an import. I’ll never have the pleasure of drinking it on draught or getting a bottle fresh off the line (unless I moved to northern England, of course). Otherwise it’s got all the makings of a Josh favorite. It’s smooth and creamy, amber-brown in color, with a flavor that combines sweet malts, a toasted grainy backbone, and a dry hazelnut finish. In the tradition of any fine English ale, the hops are mild but nonetheless provide crucial balance. Brewed in Yorkshire with well water and local yeast, this is a brown ale that flat-out blows away more popular competitors like Newcastle Brown or even American craft variants like Bell’s Best Brown. It’s off-the-charts smooth yet packed with flavor. Could this become my next favorite beer? Well, it is everything I’m looking for in a beer. And I most definitely could drink it all the time. I’m not sure if I could buy it by the case due to inflated import prices and questions of freshness. But I can’t eliminate it from the competition just yet. It’s just too freaking good! I will need to drink more of it and get back to you all in a few months.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Founders Cerise
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
And the winner is...
Beginning what I hope will become an annual tradition here at WFB, I will answer a question I’m sometimes asked: “What are your favorite beers?” Having made 45 posts over the course of six months, I’ve demonstrated that I like a lot of different beers. Although my position on this question is bound to change as I sample new brews and rediscover old ones, at this particular moment my overall Top Ten Beers are as follows.
10. Troegs Troegenator- a late winter/early spring seasonal, this criminally smooth double bock is my favorite offering off the formidable Troegs line.
9. Bass pale ale – a true classic. Drinkable, dependable, timeless.
8. Bell’s Hopslam – I’m not the world’s biggest IPA fan, but when I’m in the mood for an IPA this is the best I’ve ever had. I’m currently cellaring a few of this year’s crop to enjoy at a later date. Extraordinarily delicious.
7. Samuel Adams Boston Lager – often the only craft beer you can get at a restaurant. Because it’s so popular, beer snobs tend to forget what an exceptional beer this amber lager really is. Robust, balanced, and tasty, this is the beer that started microbrewing.
6. Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout – the tastiest Russian imperial stout I’ve ever had. The thought of drinking one of these again almost makes me wish it were winter!
5. Warsteiner Premium Dunkel – smoothest lager ever!
4. Founders Dirty Bastard – I know, I should have ranked it higher.
3. Bell’s Porter – not an “extreme” version of the porter style, but easy to drink and truly one of my all-time go-to beers.
2. Victory Baltic Thunder – Baltic porter is basically English porter on steroids. Smuttynose makes a great version as well, but Victory’s is still tops. A “big” beer in every respect, but crazy drinkable nonetheless.
1. Founders Breakfast Stout – This may never relinquish the #1 spot. EVER.
10. Troegs Troegenator- a late winter/early spring seasonal, this criminally smooth double bock is my favorite offering off the formidable Troegs line.
9. Bass pale ale – a true classic. Drinkable, dependable, timeless.
8. Bell’s Hopslam – I’m not the world’s biggest IPA fan, but when I’m in the mood for an IPA this is the best I’ve ever had. I’m currently cellaring a few of this year’s crop to enjoy at a later date. Extraordinarily delicious.
7. Samuel Adams Boston Lager – often the only craft beer you can get at a restaurant. Because it’s so popular, beer snobs tend to forget what an exceptional beer this amber lager really is. Robust, balanced, and tasty, this is the beer that started microbrewing.
6. Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout – the tastiest Russian imperial stout I’ve ever had. The thought of drinking one of these again almost makes me wish it were winter!
5. Warsteiner Premium Dunkel – smoothest lager ever!
4. Founders Dirty Bastard – I know, I should have ranked it higher.
3. Bell’s Porter – not an “extreme” version of the porter style, but easy to drink and truly one of my all-time go-to beers.
2. Victory Baltic Thunder – Baltic porter is basically English porter on steroids. Smuttynose makes a great version as well, but Victory’s is still tops. A “big” beer in every respect, but crazy drinkable nonetheless.
1. Founders Breakfast Stout – This may never relinquish the #1 spot. EVER.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Warsteiner Premium Dunkel
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCqYZS6T-oDQtY-FQ-qtXZVSSOM6lNM3OzFB9eCN2QzAjnot3FzfTjeYB9narN-VckblbRVMT6PurtBiTvZR_cufQn9stD7mNG9z5h72Mnh177fnN2eZeMkA2XRXD0yGqBD1ZZQjt84e0p/s320/warst.jpg)
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Victory Headwaters Pale Ale
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEisXHwUHfrKNyHECtCFNNAUmCYvYciv3xVlUlW_MHcFadoY6jC4ETiWVRSQOGgD7rQwpdySBJQySPmZ4aycuvOD6K3__UD2-rWYU4v5mOpqEym21E2EB1ho0aAjKIoj54SL3kAJ_BN2J2tT/s320/Victory_Headwaters_Pale_Ale.jpg)
Typically, good water makes the biggest difference in a simpler beer, which was the logic behind Victory’s Headwaters. Victory has been in business for 15 years plus, but had never made an American pale ale until now. Headwaters Pale Ale is Victory’s 15th anniversary celebration beer - a crisp, refreshing ale designed to showcase the headwaters of the east branch of Brandywine Creek. These waters are the source for Victory’s beers. Having such great water a mere 14 miles from the brewery has certainly been a large part of Victory’s success. Headwaters is Citra and Centennial hopped and made from all-German malt. And although it’s got a watery, thirst-quenching quality to it, it’s super hoppy with strong grassy and citrus notes. A bready pale malt backbone adds balance, and the finish is dry and clean like it should be. All in all, this beer is as delicious as it is simple. The always dependable Victory has done a great job of creating a “lighter” beer that still brings the flavor in abundance. And while it’s nice that this beer does allow the water quality to shine, it’s probably an even better showcase for those Citra and Centennial hops. Who knew that a session beer would end up a special treat for hop heads?! This is one you can drink all night. Just because a beer is made from great water doesn’t mean it should taste like water.
Photo courtesy of DailyBeerReview.com. Read the review here: http://www.dailybeerreview.com/2011/03/headwaters-pale-ale.html
Sunday, May 8, 2011
Smuttynose Summer Weizen
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2na8QXf1glP7uh0ayQm4AHvgzvBjicCf07UHbnEdZv4G7k6IUgyQH_wHnILQO-ua7J9k8en6QXY9O8MnJHcCbPXKfsq8HAJmu8cAAzCe8mlyEE6wau7iarxfptGWLZgLI3L8THwilVqpe/s320/weizsix-2.jpg)
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Troegs Sunshine Pils
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjaTIPA7gr3V3eJugbMVa5rM-8MyrkKUjUG7KVA-L5dvE8TcEiQQVFbJyH3ar1YH-L5AGGD5PyYpoOu4bgOO76r5p4HZSHAoVP03GUkQeGYaElSpasUoadJwbDM8Vt21vCWLDTtfvPq9gOj/s320/Sunshine=25252520Pils.jpg)
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