Or does someone know something I don't...what would I mix it with that
would actually be enjoyable ? (I only drink the de-alchoholized beer, if
that makes any differance).
Please e-mail me direct.
*************S*i*c**t*r*a*n*s*i*t**g*l*o*r*i*a**m*u*n*d*i*********
* G. MacKenzie Strickland | Theology, ethics, Joy, *
* Halifax, New Scotland (N.S.) | the singing of Psalms, *
* AB...@CFN.cs.Dal.CA | bagpipes, Tom Wham games, *
* b. 1966 | fine men's haberdashery. *
******************N*o*v*a**S*c*o*t*i*a*,**C*a*n*a*d*a*************
--
Is there any connection between the recent revival of
Scottish culture and the economic recession?
Guinness has been successfully mixed with cider, and with
champagne, or so I am told. A friend once marveled over, in detail,
the wonderful taste of a drink called "Strip and Go Naked", which
involved lemonade and beer. And there's the never-ending debate over
just what constitutes a "shandy", but for sure there's beer in it.
Beer is not often mixed, but is certainly mixable.
Greg Owen { go...@cs.tufts.edu,@xis.xerox.com } http://www.cs.tufts.edu/~gowen/
1.01 GCS/GO d++ p+ c++ l++ u++ e+ -m+ s++/- n- h !(f)? g+ -w+ t+ r-- y?
"Gentile or Jew/O you who turn the wheel and look to windward,/
Consider Phlebas, who was once handsome and tall as you." -- T.S. Eliot
Try mixing it with alcohol. Or, to save the trouble, buy actual beer
instead.
> Beer is already natures perfect beverage, so there is no need adulterate
> it as with mere mortal drink.
True enough, but beer does mix perfectly well with beer
(black and tan, or a porter from a few hundred years ago),
as well as whiskey.
Tom
--
Thomas Insel (tin...@uiuc.edu)
"If you think the United States has stood still, who built the largest
shopping center in the world?" -- Richard M. Nixon
--
Chuck Cronan from Milwaukee
ccr...@mixcom.com
(responding to something else)
: True enough, but beer does mix perfectly well with beer
. . .
: as well as whiskey.
Before I go out and try this, do you mean actually mixed, or drunk together?
1/2 shot 151
1 shot amarreto
Pour a beer. Pour the liquor into a double shot glass. Hold over beer.
Ignite liquor and drop into beer. Chug. It's a Dr. Pepper. (Or Mr. Pibb if
you prefer)
Jamie
> Before I go out and try this, do you mean actually mixed, or drunk together?
Your choice. A shot of whiskey (probably cheap bourbon around here),
poured the lager of your choice, would be called a boilermaker.
Doesn't really do that much for me, I think the objective is simply to
sneak more alcohol in.
--
Thomas Insel (tin...@uiuc.edu)
"Acceptance without proof is the fundamental characteristic of Western
religion, Rejection without proof is the fundamental characteristic of
Western science." -- Gary Zukav, "The Dancing Wu Li Masters"
:what would I mix it with that
:would actually be enjoyable ?
um. alchohol?
--
george
geo...@mech.seas.upenn.edu
Ambro van Hoof.
Krijn
--
/------------------------------------------------------------------------------\
| Krijn Mossel <tamo...@cs.vu.nl> | Department of Computer Science |
| http://www.cs.vu.nl/~tamossel | Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam |
\------------------------------------------------------------------------------/
Skip and Go naked is good. The recipe told to me by my father was:
1 liter vodka (or any other clear liquer)
1 6-pack of beer (preferably cheap, it really doesn't matter)
3 frozen concentrates of lemonade
1 frozen concentrate of pink lemonade
It tastes bery good.
try my beer page at this URL: http://falcon.cc.ukans.edu/~god/beer/beer.html
my e-mail address is: g...@falcon.cc.ukans.edu
thanks. Russell McGuire
I really don't like beer myself. I also wonder if it is mixable. That is an
interesting question. I really don't have any answer. Sorry.
(lost attribution)
: >: True enough, but beer does mix perfectly well with beer
: >. . .
: >: as well as whiskey.
: >
(me)
: >Before I go out and try this, do you mean actually mixed, or drunk together?
(Adam)
: i enjoy a good lager with some Jack Dainels (mmm...suddenly this dr.
: pepper that i am drinking isn't quite as satisfying). i have never tried
: it with an ale though. anyone else?
Wow, talk about non-responsive.
I ask again, do you mean actually mixed, or drunk together (out of
separate glasses, but at approximately the same time)?
i enjoy a good lager with some Jack Dainels (mmm...suddenly this dr.
pepper that i am drinking isn't quite as satisfying). i have never tried
it with an ale though. anyone else?
adam
opps, sorry about that.
yes, i mean that i pour about 2 oz. of Jack Daniels (i guess you could
use another whiskey - maybe even scotch - but i love JD) into a tall beer
glass and then fill with beer. like i said before, i have only had it
with lager, but the more i think about it the more i think that it might
be very good with an ale.
adam
: ab...@cfn.cs.dal.ca (MacKenzie Strickland) writes:
: > It seems to me of all the beverages consumed by humankind, beer is the
: > most unmixable one.
I seem to remember mixing 50-50 beer with tomato juice. I drank an awful
lot of it and woke up without a hangover. Although, I was never tempted
again.
=======================================================================
[ | ]
[ Mike McPhail | Look For NEW "Signature 95" ]
[ mcp...@mail.msen.com | Coming This Summer! ]
[ aa...@detroit.freenet.org | (or fall, whenever it's ready) ]
[ | ]
=======================================================================
> I don't consume them, but boilermakers are a shot of whiskey *in* the beer;
> previous posts have alluded to this concoction. Favorite breakfast drink
> in some parts of Chicago.
>
How do you keep the shot glass from smashing into your teeth when you
drink?
I worked with a guy who always drank his beer this way. He started to avoid
hangovers and said he just got so used to it his beer didn't taste right
without it. You should have seen the looks he got at bars asking for tomato
juice to add to his beer!
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sean MacLennan | s...@toolsmiths.on.ca
Software Engineer | bn...@freenet.carleton.ca
Toolsmiths, Canada |
>I worked with a guy who always drank his beer this way. He started to avoid
>hangovers and said he just got so used to it his beer didn't taste right
>without it. You should have seen the looks he got at bars asking for tomato
>juice to add to his beer!
I can imagine. I tried this once, and it tasted bloody awful, but the
additional water and free-radical scavenging vitamins in the tomatoe juice
would probably go a long way to countering the dilatory effects of the
ethanol (and it's metabolic byproduct, aldehyde).
David Bridgman, ACIC
Chemical Engineering
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
888-4567 x3649
Monopoly anyone?
bu...@falcon.cc.ukans.edu (Cheryl Jaremba) writes:
>I just thought I'd help out with the directions a little here. As a
>bartender and waitress I've seen bad things come out of this. A single
>shot glass is all that's necessary. Fill three-quarters full with
>amaretto, then top with 151. Ignite while sitting on the shot is sitting
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Yeeeeeouch!
Also- When I was in Germany, I tried a "cola weizen," Coke mixed with
weizenbier -- pretty good, actually -- but I'm not sure in what
proportions.
-
PHILLIP LUEBKE FPM...@prodigy.com
Sounds kinda like a "Radler," a half and half mix of lager and some kinda
soft drink (possibly an Almdudler-like "Kraeuterlimonade": an "herbal"
soft drink?) Not bad on a hot day.
Another mix: isn't there a drink which combines Guiness and Champagne?
And, less apetizing, I once met a guy from Estonia who put vodka in his
beer. He was crazy, though (and that isn't typical of people from Estonia).
--
John Dunlevy
du...@midway.uchicago.edu
: And, less apetizing, I once met a guy from Estonia who put vodka in his
: beer. He was crazy, though (and that isn't typical of people from
Estonia).
I once knew a guy who did this, but purely to increase the alcohol
content of beer. He was crazy too.
Nobody ever answered my question: When drinking a boilermaker, how do
you keep the shot glass from smashing into your teeth?
-----
Joe
> Nobody ever answered my question: When drinking a boilermaker, how do
> you keep the shot glass from smashing into your teeth?
You don't. It's part of the experience.
glw
Nobody's mentioned the famous and wonderful "Blow Yer Skull Off".
The recipe, you ask? Here 'tis:
some dry stout
some rum (a little less rum than beer, and I prefer Mount Gay)
a squirt 'o lime juice
some opium (optional and illegal)
crushed cayenne pepper 'round the rim of the mug
Try a sweet stout instead of a dry one if you're feeling meek.
I use Guiness for my dry and Dragon for my sweet. Actually, although not
traditional, I find the sweet stout balances the lime juice quite nicely.
This is a real drink. They serve it at The Brickskeller in D.C. It's
reputably (at least according the Brickskeller menu) an old Austalian coal
miner's drink. Try it if you dare. It's only killed three people that I
know of, and they were all fairly weak to begin with.
glw