The Reality of BEER
Beer Festival: Florida Panhandle
“Personal Brewery” Produces Beer in Seven Days
A bit pricey and decent beer normally takes more than 7 days: conditioning. Plus regular homebrew gear can be had for a lot less.-PGA
Written by Ben Coxworth for gizmag.com and Popular Science
Ian Williams and and Anders Warn, with the WilliamsWarn beer brewing machine.
Home beer-brewing is sort of like writing a novel – although you might like the idea of having done it, the thought of all the work involved in doing it can be off-putting. If the PR materials are to be believed, however, the WilliamsWarn brewing machine could make the process a lot easier … and quicker. Unlike the four weeks required by most home brewing systems, it can reportedly produce beer in just seven days.
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MGD 64 Lemonade Dies An Early Death
(The Professor is a little short on taste bud tolerance this century, so he’ll skip this one-PGA)
Written by Chris Morran for consumerist.com
Earlier this year, the MillerCoors marketing machine decided that people really wanted a lemonade version of its successful MGD 64 low-calorie beer. Alas, there must have been a mistake in the algorithm and after only a few months on shelves, the beverage is no more.
“Winning in beer requires testing the bounds of the market with innovation,” MillerCoors president of sales wrote earlier today in an email to MillerCoors distributors. “With that commitment, however, comes a recognition that not every innovation will succeed. That is the case with MGD 64 Lemonade, so we have decided to discontinue this line extension.”
If you happen to like this particular beverage, you’ll want to hit up the store now, as Miller plans to buy back whatever existing retail stock it can. Which makes us wonder what they’re going to do with it when they get it back to Miller HQ.
Joe Sixpack: In the Narrow Category of Worst Beer, a Fresh Contender
Written by Joe Sixpack (Don Russell) for philly.com
ASK ME THE WORST beer I’ve ever had, and the answer was always easy: Stegmaier Gold Medal.
This was back in the 1970s. The case of 12-ounce cans was smuggled into a dorm room inside a leather suitcase, and we began popping them open before they were sufficiently iced.
It tasted like hay. Or, more accurately, hay that had been cut, baled and then used as bedding for incontinent goats. The rancid flavor lingers to this day and, as I said, it was the worst I’d ever tasted.
Until last week, when I swallowed a mouthful of MGD 64 Lemonade.
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Craft Brewers Look Local for Untapped Demand

From AP
Writer NOT Credited
FREDERICK, Md. — Some craft brewers are growing by shrinking.
After years of shipping beer farther and farther away, many small brewers are now shrinking distribution to sell beer more profitably at home.
The strategy reflects the nation’s growing thirst for boutique beers from independent breweries that simply can’t produce enough to meet the demand of a larger market — so they’re putting local customers first.
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HERE
Umami: It’s Not About the Marriage—It’s About the Child
Written by Charlie Papazian for craftbeer.com
Most discussions regarding food and craft beer pairings emphasize the perfect marriages. It is remarkable to beginning beer enthusiasts how well beer pairs with certain foods.
I’ve recently discovered that fundamentally food and craft beer pairings are not about the marriage, nor the independent characteristics of food and beer. Pairings are about the child—the final result experience. It’s all about something called umami, a fifth taste sensation we all experience but are usually unaware of.
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Baird / Ishii / Stone Japanese Green Tea IPA Collaboration
Iron-Age Brewing Evidence Found in Southeastern France
The BBC NEVER credits their writers. Shame.-PGA

From the BBC
Archaeologists have uncovered evidence that the occupants of southeastern France were brewing beer during the Iron Age, some 2,500 years ago.
A paper in Human Ecology outlines the discovery of barley grains that had been sprouted in a process known as malting; an oven found nearby may have been used to regulate the process.
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