Microbreweries, Chris, *microbreweries*.
We have a very fine local brewpub and they make a variety of ales:
http://www.freestatebrewing.com/FSBBeers.html.
But I will agree with you that the watery stuff that Budweiser and the like
sell is not, by any stretch, "beer." (Except perhaps in a derivative sense.)
m
-------
"Mauchly's Test of Sphericity:
Tests the null hypothesis that the error covariance matrix of the
orthonormalized transformed dependent variables is proportional
to an identity matrix."
---
SPSS
________________________________
From: Christopher D. Green [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2007 7:04 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Re: Beer, meanings of words, etc (was BBC NEWS |
Education | Whose classroom curriculum is it?
Ale is an English drink. Originally it was not flavored with hops (and
it doesn't necessarily come in green bottles). It was often flavored with
spices such as clove (which still makes a fine Christmas-season drink, if you
make your own). "Beer" is the anglicization of the French variant, bière, which
was flavored with hops. English soldiers returning from war in France liked it
so much that the ale-makers in England eventually got with the program and
figured out how to get and use hops.
Neither is produced in the US. :-)
Chris
===========
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can someone tell me the difference between a beer and an ale
and why
does ale come in a green bottle?
MJS
---- Original Message ----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [tips] Re: Beer, meanings of words, etc (was BBC NEWS |
Education | Whose classroom curriculum is it?
Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2007 10:31:06 -0500
Peter: Sounds good to me! and I agree about the
artificial cooling!
-----------------------------
John W. Kulig
Professor of Psychology
Director, Psychology Honors
Plymouth State University
Plymouth NH 03264
-----------------------------
_____
From: Peter Harzem [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 12, 2007 9:57 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Re: Beer, meanings of words, etc (was
BBC NEWS |
Education |
Whose classroom curriculum is it?
On Feb 11, 2007, at 8:08 PM, John Kulig wrote:
Peter:
Is this beer at room temperature? I just glanced at
Christopher
Green's post
.. I may have lost already. BUT, I want to look at the
wording of the
questions before I concede. Hold on!! [If all all else
fails I will
work on
a favorable definition of 'reasonable' - you know, it
depends on what
the
definition of is, is :) ]
John,
The temperature of good beer depends where is the room:
in Alabama or
in
John o' Groats*! Thought of artificially cooled English
beer is
painful
(ugh!). As for the definition (actually the meaning) of
'is', I just
looked
it up in the Oxford English Dictionary: there are 10++
meanings. (The
point
Clinton made was not at all silly, but as a politician
he should have
known
that most people would think it was.) So, don't worry
about
definitions -
you may have set yourself an impossible task. And the
bet: you say
tomato I
say tameito... So, let's call the whole thing off....
By the way, I just read Chris who thinks he was
interjecting humor
into all
this; I thought you and I had already done that! (We
are number ONE,
we
are...)
Peter
*Northernmost tip of Britain.
Peter Harzem, B.Sc.(Lond.), Ph.D.(Wales)
Hudson Professor Emeritus
Department of Psychology
Auburn University
Auburn, AL 36849-5214
USA
Phone: +334 844-6482
Fax: +334 844-4447
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Personal E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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