Are You Spoiled?

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by deleted_user_1379257, Apr 25, 2026.

  1. uncleotis

    uncleotis Pooh-Bah (1,637) Feb 17, 2015 Illinois
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Oh, be that guy. I can't believe I made that mistake. I wasn't even drinking last night. Maybe that was the problem.
     
  2. JayORear

    JayORear Grand Pooh-Bah (3,058) Feb 22, 2012 California
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Back in CA, I'm surrounded by fresh Pliny, and when I have a hankering for a solid hazy, there's plenty of Alvarado St. around. Also, the last few Heady/Focal drops in the area have been jaw-dropping, more than I could ask for.
     
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  3. zotzot

    zotzot Grand Pooh-Bah (5,352) Feb 22, 2015 Vermont
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    I agree, on aver7, you can get some good beer options at most restaurants, whereas 10 years ago it was Bud Lite and Coors
     
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  4. zotzot

    zotzot Grand Pooh-Bah (5,352) Feb 22, 2015 Vermont
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Fresh Pliny sounds spoiled
     
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  5. rocdoc1

    rocdoc1 Savant (1,215) Jan 13, 2006 New Mexico

    It's a style that doesn't cross my path very often. 20 years ago I remember enjoying them at brewpubs, it was a favorite style for me. But I haven't seen one for as long as I can remember. Maybe now I should try it again, I think the local pub in Silver City may brew one but I don't think I've tried it. As I say often, I live in beer hell, 14 miles from civilization, so pub drinking is a real rarity for me.
     
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  6. JackHorzempa

    JackHorzempa Grand Pooh-Bah (3,375) Dec 15, 2005 Pennsylvania
    Society Pooh-Bah

    The beauty of homebrewing! :beers:

    Cheers!
     
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  7. zotzot

    zotzot Grand Pooh-Bah (5,352) Feb 22, 2015 Vermont
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    HF 4 packs are still pricy by my standards - $19-20
     
  8. khaledkamel1500

    khaledkamel1500 Devotee (360) Jun 28, 2025 Michigan

    Yes and no

    I love the fancy shit, like Lindemans Framboise and Dragon Fandango, but if nothing else is around and I desperately need to unwind, I will settle for a Michelob Ultra if I *really* have to

    Modelo and/or Heineken are usually the restaurant choices, they're not refined, but they're not dirt-cheap pisswater either
     
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  9. colts9016

    colts9016 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,391) Jul 2, 2007 Idaho
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    I can relate to being spoiled—so many options that you forget how good something like Spotted Cow actually is. It’s always there, so I end up reaching for something different just to mix it up.

    I’ve been lucky enough to visit New Glarus Brewing Company and have it fresh on tap at the source. It absolutely lives up to the hype. I flew there on that trip—but next time, I’m seriously considering a U-Haul.

    But that’s not really the point.

    Earlier this year, I hit a bit of a crossroads in my beer journey. Getting deeper into tasting and reviewing pushed me somewhere I didn’t expect—I became a “whale chaser.” Always hunting the rare, the hyped, the hard-to-get. My cellar still has plenty of those bottles waiting their turn.

    The question I had to ask myself was: am I actually discovering great beer, or just chasing exclusivity?

    The honest answer? I’ve missed out on a lot by only wanting what I couldn’t have.

    There are beers—sometimes overlooked, sometimes inconsistent in reviews—that still have something to offer. I’ve found that even stepping into something like SeaQuake Brewing led me to discover some genuinely great IPAs with unique hop profiles I wouldn’t have appreciated otherwise.

    It’s a shift in mindset. Not just defaulting to what’s rare, but staying open—whether it’s a “lazy pick” like Spotted Cow or something unexpected off the beaten path.

    Does anyone else find themselves reevaluating what they reach for?
     
  10. uncleotis

    uncleotis Pooh-Bah (1,637) Feb 17, 2015 Illinois
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Yeah, I got this feeling when Anchor closed. My initial reaction was "oh man that's too bad" then I realized I hadn't bought their stuff in forever. So now I try to make sure to buy an "old classic" along with the "let's try this new thing" more often than not.
     
  11. ttoadee

    ttoadee Pooh-Bah (2,152) Dec 26, 2024 Texas
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

    I find the "whale" type beers on my list I want to try at the brewery, or somewhere close by. I want that contextual experience. So at home, I am just trying to spread a decent amount of local love.
     
    uncleotis likes this.
  12. brewme

    brewme Grand Pooh-Bah (4,014) Mar 1, 2014 Massachusetts
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    I think that Spotted Cow is mediocre.
     
  13. colts9016

    colts9016 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,391) Jul 2, 2007 Idaho
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    I appreciate that sentiment—and I want to expand on it for a minute.

    Spotted Cow might be called “mediocre” by some, but I think that misses what actually makes it great: consistency.

    For a brewer to hit the same profile, batch after batch, year after year—that’s where the art of brewing really shows up.

    It’s easy to chase bold, rare, or experimental beers. It’s much harder to produce something clean, balanced, and repeatable at scale. Malt changes year to year. Hop crops vary. Yeast can drift. Everything wants to introduce variation.

    I’ve seen this up close—my brother works for Budweiser, and even their malt has to meet strict lab specs before it’s accepted. That level of control is no accident.

    So yeah—maybe Spotted Cow drinks like a simple farmhouse ale. Maybe it doesn’t blow your mind.

    But it shows up the same way every time.

    In that sense, it’s like a Big Mac. You know exactly what you’re getting, no matter where you are. And while that might sound like a knock, it’s actually one of the hardest things to pull off in brewing.

    Call it basic if you want—but consistency at that level is anything but.

    That’s what makes it impressive.