vegster; My advice is to abstain totally. After weeks of being good have the odd beer and also the odd can of full sugar cola. Life's too short to have to drink shit alternatives said:We’ve had some nights of moderation
vegster; My advice is to abstain totally. After weeks of being good have the odd beer and also the odd can of full sugar cola. Life's too short to have to drink shit alternatives said:We’ve had some nights of moderation
As I'm cutting back for a month or so, and I had heard that alcohol free beer has improved a lot in the 20 years or so since I last tried it, I thought that I'd get a couple of bottles in to have whilst cooking/eating dinner. Not knowing much about it I opted for Peroni Libera, as Peroni is a lager I like.
What a mistake! It's horrendous. I cannot belive that it is all this bad so could the great and the good of NSC help me to make a better choice next time please.
What is the point?
Lucky Saint is supposedly good. A colleague has just left my company to head up their their technical department for draft.
A few observations about this thread and AF beer generally:
- good on the OP for starting it and for looking for ways to reduce his alcohol intake - smart.
- asking people what beer they recommend would be a recipe for disaster - we all have such varied taste, so asking for AF recommendations is similarly fraught
- many people it seems have very limited experience of AF beers, so their reference is pretty narrow
- which means they may tend to either dismiss AF beers and/or they recommend pretty poor, widely available drinks
- AF beer is misunderstood, leading to the inevitable "what's the point?" comments (see all the other 'going dry' threads on here is you want to understand that - there is some complex and deep rooted beliefs being challenged here - and they won't change without a fight)
- In some countries AF beer is 0.5% or lower. In the UK, only 0.0% can be called AF. Here, 0.5% is called Low Alcohol
- if beer has less than 0.5%, the body will process the alchol more quickly than you can absorb it, so it is in effect AF
- yes there can be more alcohol in a very ripe banana than Low Alc beers
- there are some amazing producers of AF beer, but generally they take some finding (often online) - think about real ale before it went mainstream. There was a time when I would have told people that Websters Yorkshire Bitter was a decent pint. Sorry.
- Guiness seem to have garnered universal praise for their 0.0. I'm not a stout fan, but I've not heard a bad word
So here's a question. Does anyone fancy running a NSC AF Beer Taste Test with me? DM me if you do and we can sort out the details. I'm thinking we have a few categories (lager, bitter/IPA, stouts etc) and run a virtual tasting panel and report back to NSC to provide some considered advice. AF Beer will only grow as a category - why don't we get ahead of that?
Heineken Zero and Becks Blue both taste just like real lagers, and have fewer than 100 calories per bottle.
Some pubs are now starting to sell AF lager on draught, to cater for the growing number of health conscious (mostly) youngsters who might otherwise stop going to pubs altogether.
A few observations about this thread and AF beer generally:
- good on the OP for starting it and for looking for ways to reduce his alcohol intake - smart.
- asking people what beer they recommend would be a recipe for disaster - we all have such varied taste, so asking for AF recommendations is similarly fraught
- many people it seems have very limited experience of AF beers, so their reference is pretty narrow
- which means they may tend to either dismiss AF beers and/or they recommend pretty poor, widely available drinks
- AF beer is misunderstood, leading to the inevitable "what's the point?" comments (see all the other 'going dry' threads on here is you want to understand that - there is some complex and deep rooted beliefs being challenged here - and they won't change without a fight)
- In some countries AF beer is 0.5% or lower. In the UK, only 0.0% can be called AF. Here, 0.5% is called Low Alcohol
- if beer has less than 0.5%, the body will process the alchol more quickly than you can absorb it, so it is in effect AF
- yes there can be more alcohol in a very ripe banana than Low Alc beers
- there are some amazing producers of AF beer, but generally they take some finding (often online) - think about real ale before it went mainstream. There was a time when I would have told people that Websters Yorkshire Bitter was a decent pint. Sorry.
- Guiness seem to have garnered universal praise for their 0.0. I'm not a stout fan, but I've not heard a bad word
So here's a question. Does anyone fancy running a NSC AF Beer Taste Test with me? DM me if you do and we can sort out the details. I'm thinking we have a few categories (lager, bitter/IPA, stouts etc) and run a virtual tasting panel and report back to NSC to provide some considered advice. AF Beer will only grow as a category - why don't we get ahead of that?