Thanks for the laughs Scott!
http://blog.mysanantonio.com/food/20...esist-request/
shout out to Scott and Freetail
Thanks for the laughs Scott!
in awesome.
That was good.
The redacting was done wrong. You are suppose to xerox the redacted do ent do you can't make out what's under the ink.
Well done, Freetail. ing lawyers.
Here's a classic GFY response from one lawyer to another, perhaps not nearly as creative, but wonderful nonetheless. http://www.edibleapple.com/2011/03/1...t-letter-ever/
So Scott...
Trying to make friends in Eugene?
Scott, I watched the video attached to the link. Nice job, but I had a question. Why is it, in your opinion that certain goods (beer) will continue to thrive regardless of the situation in the marketplace? As you mentioned, even when there was a lack of quality and choice, the need to get drunk supplanted the typical marketplace theory for there to be a product consumers want to buy because of quality and choice. Are there some fundamental things that supersede traditional market theory and can thrive regardless of the situation such as beer? Obviously, market theory is just a theory and as efficient as the market can be, that doesn't mean it's 100% efficient, but it's interesting to think that there are innate cravings that seem shatter any logical thought and take place at a different level of human thought/emotion.
Cc: Flying Spaghetti Monster
Mahahahahahahaha...
Well, in the case of beer, I believe you had a product that had certain qualities (it got you intoxicated) and the vast majority of consumers never knew anything otherwise in terms of what was available. Even today, the majority of people are unfamiliar with craft beer (it still only represents 5% of the market in the US) despite the fact that the vast majority of companies making beer are craft brewers (and the average American lives within 10 miles of a craft brewery).
I think the Hamburger Analogy is a good one. So long as you've never had another hamburger in your life, McDonald's may seem great. It's not when you are able to compare it against better products that you see it for what it really is.
Thanks for thinking I can occasionally be funny, everyone. This whole thing has kind of "gone viral" and it's being blown out of proportion. I have nothing against the other brewery and would love to drink their beers.
Support your local brewery, wherever that may be.
Cheers!
I'm pretty sure a good IPA requires dryhopping. That's an added process.
An IPA doesn't require any different process, just different ingredients (and increased quan y of certain ingredients) - unless they are specifically set up to only do Lagers (which may be possible since all 4 of those beers are lagers) and only have horizontal tanks, in which case their equipment may not be appropriate for ales.
They may also just not want to do an IPA but rather than tell you that they are blowing smoke up your butt.
Some IPAs are dry hopped, some are not. Whether a "good" IPA requires dry hopping would be a matter of personal preference.
I forgot about the top and bottom yeasts. Makes sense.
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