Normski1989
Well-known member
U started drinking early today ?
Only coffee!
U started drinking early today ?
Only coffee!
Fair point; tramps drink from cans and not bottles. It's an argument I have heard before and some breweries are having to really push the idea of cans.
Sounds a bit like the cork/screw top debate in the wine world and trying to break the cork = real wine, screw top = plonk perception.
I guess, thinking back to pre-craft days, bottles/cans was a bit of a differentiator. Crap lager came in cans, typically a 4-pack of 440mls, whilst better beer came in glass.
I get that but 330ml, 355ml? Nearly all other ale comes in 500ml bottles so why not 250ml? 660ml seems to be reserved for lagers such as Cobra so why half a Cobra or Stella. I'll have 58% of a pint of beer please barkeep.If drinking pints is your thing maybe craft isn't for you. It's more about quality than quantity.
Definitely with you on that. But then outside of craft beer, not much canned beer tends to be something other than John Smiths or the like.I also think beer tastes "tinny" out of a can but can"t prove it.
All the best beers in the supermarket seem to come in bottles...Adnams, for example. Not cans.
The only benefit to cans is they are easier to recycle at home, being crushable and lighter
I also think beer tastes "tinny" out of a can but can"t prove it.
I get that but 330ml, 355ml? Nearly all other ale comes in 500ml bottles so why not 250ml? 660ml seems to be reserved for lagers such as Cobra so why half a Cobra or Stella. I'll have 58% of a pint of beer please barkeep.
Brewdog, Beavertown, Stone can imho be classed as very good* and all supply in cans. Many others do as well.
* I say good as it's silly to say they're the best as the market is very very crowded.
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Not buying the UV argument. Or we'd get fine wines in a tinny.
Look what's arrived!
Which one do you go for first?
There was actually a picture on the website showing 8 of the 10, after you placed the order.