Enjoying a Cadillac Mountain Stout as we speak.
Damn fine brew made in Maine.
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reminisco wrote:JACKAZZTJM wrote:your friend was probly goin to gas stations and shit all he had to do was go to a beer distributor
yeah, your buddy couldn't possibly have seen an accurate sampling...
at the beer distributors in Pennsylvania or the liquor stores in Jersey, you can find beer from all over the world, including the local micro-breweries, like Flying Fish, Brooklyn, Yards, etc.
and that begs the question. can you get those beers in Washington state? what about Yuengling Lager? is that sold nationwide?
i'm curious... cause within the last few years, i've been seeing Yuengling in places where you'd never have seen it before, like in NYC, and even up in Connecticut or Taxachussetts.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
dewey316 wrote:Yeah, your lucky, the PNW is the beer capital of the US. Several years ago, Portland actualy took over, as the city with the most brewery's in the world. (it used to be Colonge, germany I think).
Being in WA, you get lucky, you get stuff like Mac & Jacs, that is really only availavle localy, being from Portland, I am in the same boat. Even when I travel to Cali, or other western states outside of the OR/WA section, you just can't get the high quality micro brews that you get in OR/WA.
Cheers!
John
Jenos Ridan wrote:A good friend of mine got back from a trip to Tennesee(sp?) and North Carolina, and he says that he couldn't find a store that sold anything other than the run-of-the-mill Bud, Miller, Coors, Steel Reserve, Michelob and other third-rate swill. Apparently, not even a high-end country club had anything decent.
AndrewLC wrote:Where in Washington? I live in the Tri-Cities
Jenos Ridan wrote:AndrewLC wrote:Where in Washington? I live in the Tri-Cities
Little town about twenty miles north of Vancouver, straddling the I-5.
Iz Man wrote:Good, quality hard cider is indeed hard to find; but that's just simply due to "demand side" economics. There simply isn't a large enough demand for it, hence the lack of a quality commercial product.
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