You can get decent beer in the US;
Amstel and Carlsberg are available in
New York and San Francisco -- and
hundreds of other places I've never
visited, I guess.
I once drank a bottle of Miller's in
Ballston Lake, or Saratoga Springs I
can't be sure. It was atrocious. Why is
beer making so difficult? Or do they
make it right and then bugger it up
before bottling?
Don W
Paul Stenquist wrote:
Coors was very popular among east coast and midwest auto racers,
particularly drag racers, during the sixties. It wasn't available east
of the Rockies, so it was essentially an "import." In those days the
fastest dragsters were all from California, and the California racers
used empty Coors cans to cover their eight exhaust pipes went the car
was shut off. Their eastern counterparts wanted everything the fast guys
had of course, so getting a set of Coors cans was a major achievement.
Some apparently took the leap of logic that if the cans were good for
covering your pipes, the beer must be good for pouring down your
personal pipe. So guys driving back from the west coast used to pack as
much Coors as they could into their trucks. I guess for folks who grew
up drinking Bud, Miller and Strohs, it probably tasted okay. Like most
other beers, I would guess it's not the same brew today that it was
forty years ago. I can't remember ever trying it.
Paul
On Dec 10, 2005, at 6:26 AM, graywolf wrote:
An allegedly alcoholic beverage brewed by a neo-Nazi company in
Colorado. The main virtue of it was it was 3.2% beer and thus legally
buyable by use underage GI's back in the early 60's. Definitely not
for anyone who likes the taste of beer. AKA cow piss.
As you probably can tell I did not like the man, the company, nor the
beer.
graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------
Boris Liberman wrote:
Hi!
Here's a pic of little April enjoying a Coors. I'm wondering which
rendition you prefer, and why. If you've the time and inclination, I'd
appreciate any comments. Thanks!
http://home.earthlink.net/~scbelinkoff/april-2up.html
What Coors is, please?
I prefer the right one... I generally tend to tone my b/w stuff to
warm sepia tones... Feeling warm towards the child can only enhance
the photo.
Boris
--
Dr E D F Williams
_______________________________
http://personal.inet.fi/cool/don.williams
See feature: The Cement Company from Hell
Updated: Print Gallery -- 16 11 2005