Since it is St. Patrick’s Day today, I thought I’d make a post about beer.

Bland pale mass produced lagers often made with low quality ingredients are very common now a day. Examples are Corona, Bud Light, Heineken, Miller Light, etc. However, there are many other beer styles. For example, there are:
Lagers:
- Pale Lager that is not mass produced and not containing low quality ingredients
- Dark Lager including Schwarzbier (essentially black)
- Red/Amber Lager
- Pilsner
- Adjunct Lager
- Rice Lager
- Vienna Lager
- India Pale Lager
Ales:
- Stouts
- Porter
- Pale Ale
- IPA / India Pale Ale (the second most popular beer style)
- Hefeweizen
- Kristallweizen
- Witbier
- Irish Red Ale (what I am drinking above)
- Saison
- Wild Ale
- Lambic
- Geueze
- Gose
- Smoked beer
- Belgian Blonde Ale
- Steam Beer
- Kvass
- Gruit
- And much more
The beer advocate counts 120 beer styles of which I’ve had 107 so far. Beer advocate features around 250,000 different beers.

Generally speaking, beers are classified into two main types of beers, lagers and ales, or perhaps lagers and ales plus other beers. Steam beers are hard to classify and Lambics you don’t refer to as ales even though they technically are ales. Stouts, porters, hefeweizen, pale ales, IPAs, Wild Ales, Lambics are all ales. In the short list above, everything below Vienna Lager are ales.

Lager beer is a relatively recent invention that originated in Bavaria. Lager beers use a special kind of yeast for the fermentation process, it is typically bottom fermented, and fermented and conditioned in cool temperatures, unlike other beer styles. Lager beers can be of many colors, pale, amber, dark, even black such as Schwarzbier. The Pale Lager originated in Pilsen in Bohemia (Western Czech Republic) in the mid-19th century. The pale lager has become the world’s most common beer style and bland tasting mass-produced pale lager beers dominate the market. In countries that are not traditional beer countries such as France, Italy, China, Japan and South America, the bland pale lager is very dominant. I’ve come across many people who think that the more tasteless the pale lager is, the better beer it is (people who love Corona).

Stout is a dark, top-fermented beer / Ale style. Sub styles include dry stout, oatmeal stout, milk stout and imperial stout. It is derived from the Porter, which originated in London, England in the early 1720s. Stout is basically a stronger and more flavorful porter. However, there is no clear distinction between porter and stout. I am sure you have heard of Guinness Stout, a very Irish beer. Imperial stouts are extra strong, full bodied and flavorful stouts. Below is an imperial stout, which interestingly enough is not dark brown or black but golden/amber.

IPAs, India Pale Ales is an extremely popular Ale that is typically flavorful and quite bitter. It is in a sense an anti-Lager. It is the beer style that I drink the most. The IPA is a type of Ale (fermented at warm temperatures, unlike, for example, lagers). It is typically a Pale Ale (exceptions are black IPAs). It was invented in England in the early 1800’s and became popular for exportation to India. It is characterized by its higher content of hops and the level of alcohol is often higher as well. More hops and more alcohol made it easier to preserve the beer for the trip to India.

As I mentioned there are a lot of beer styles. One of the lesser-known ones is smoked beers. Smoked beer, or Rauchbier, is a type of beer with a distinctive smoke flavor imparted by using malted barley dried over an open flame. It goes great with barbecue. Below is an example of the style that I’ve had quite often.

If you are paying attention to beer, you may have heard about “Trappist beers”. This is very special category that is not referring to a beer style, but by who makes it. Trappist beer is brewed by Trappist monks. There are tens of thousands of breweries in the world but there are only 13 Trappist breweries in the world. Trappist beers are considered to be very special. The most highly praised of the Trappist beers is Westvleteren 12 from Brouwerij Westvleteren founded in 1838 at the Trappist Abbey of Saint Sixtus in Vleteren, Belgium. Westvleteren 12 is a so called Quadrupel Belgian Ale. It is often said that Quadrupel means that it has been re-fermented four times, but it is often not true. However, quadruple means that it is a stronger, darker and more flavorful. Westvleteren 12 is extremely difficult to buy but I have been able to get my hands on several.

I think my favorite type of lagers are Märzen and my favorite Ales are IPAs.
Do you have a favorite Lager? Do you have a favorite Ale?

Hej Thomas,
Vilka underbara bilder – speciellt den Irländska 🙂 !
All in for St. Patrick’s Day 🙂
Cheers
Ulf
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Tack så mycket Ulf. Jo det är en speciell St. Patrick’s dag post. Ha en bra dag efter St. Parick’s Dagen.
Thomas
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Happy Patrick’s Day! Your green outfit is spot on.
I enjoyed the pairing of glasses and beers, really well done. Corona is, by far, my favorite Lager. And I’ll take Guiness for the Ale, thank you.
Have a great week further. Monday already! Ah, well.
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Thank you so much Patricia. Guiness sounds good to me. I liked Corona when I was younger but now I like more flavor. But I know people differ. After a tornado destroyed our roof there was a Mexican guy working on our roof. I asked him if he wanted a beer and he said yes. All I had in the fridge was IPAs so I offered him one. He told me it wasn’t bad but he thought it was a bit bitter. I told him it was an IPA. He told me “man have you ever heard of Corona?”. I guess that’s what he preferred.
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Hi Thomas, I shall disappoint you and say I don’t drink any kind of beer, only a little wine. My mom drinks milk stout and my dad also drinks beer. You know a lot about beer and it is very interesting. I attended a poetry club meeting on Saturday, and one member from Sweden, was busy brewing beer. He was running in and out to attend to it.
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Thank you Roberta. My wife doesn’t drink beer either. It is interesting that your mom drinks milk stout. It is also interesting that you met a Swedish guy at poetry club meeting and he was brewing beer. When you boil the wort you really have to watch it. It is like boiling milk, it can just boil over any second, and then the floor will be sticky.
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Yes, that is more or less what he explained
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Happy St. Patrick’s Day, Thomas! You went out of your way to celebrate the occasion! You must have a big folder with beer photos. They all look attractive and tempting.
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Thank you Miriam. Yes I made it special. You are right I have about 1,000 beer photos on my phone. People make fun of me for it. Happy St. Patrick’s Day.
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I do like beer–a lot better than wine–but can’t drink it. My husband is Irish so used to make up for both of us!
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Yes “Murray” that sounds Irish. Not drinking beer is healthier. I follow my doctors advice on beer and I’m already done for the rest of the week.
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You look very festive, Thomas! 😀 I’ve learned so much about beer from you. You are a wealth of knowledge.
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Thank you so much Kymber. I guess I joined the craft beer movement.
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Wow! I had no idea there were so many different types of beer!!
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Neither I until I got into craft beers. There are dog beers too (alcohol free of course). Our Leonberger Bronco and our Japanese Shin Ryu loved dog beer, but our pug Daisy didn’t.
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Ok I definitely did not know that! Mom just looked it up and will be finding some for me and my furry siblings! 🍺 Cheers!
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That sounds great. Cheers Clicquot 🍻
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This has to be the definitive post on beer. I have always referred to the American lagers as carbonated defrost. I have very limited space for beer in my drinking life so what I drink has to be as near perfect to my tastes as possible. My go to brand is VooDoo Ranger Imperial IPA. It never disappoints and is a reasonable combination of hoppy flavor and a ABV strong enough to guarantee a memorable quaff. Great job, Thomas. I’ll bet the research was fun. BTW you can tell by the head that that India Adjunct Lager is weak. Looks like Miller Lite in the glass.
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Thank you for your kind words John. I love VooDoo Ranger Imperial IPA as well. However, I think my go to IPA is Yellow Rose from Lone Pint, but it is milder than VooDoo Ranger Imperial IPA. Since you are from Texas you probably know Yellow Rose as well. And you are right about the Taj Mahal beer. Cheers 🍻
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😊
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I usually favor darker beers over lighter ones but I don’t think I have any particular favorites (although I do like a rarely-available beer called “Flipside” from Sierra Nevada) ― I just tend to buy ones that look weird or interesting at BevMo. Sometimes this pays off and sometimes it doesn’t, like the time I bought some crazy microbrew beer where they put rocks in while it’s fermenting, and it tasted like ……. beer with rocks in it. 🤷♂️
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Microbrews are sometimes experimental but it is the first time I hear of rocks. I guess it didn’t rock. Cheers 🍻
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Good information and photos, though I don’t drink beer. Happy Patrick’s Day to you, Thomas!
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Thank you so much Kaushal
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My daughter introduced me to Lambic at Christmas. I loved it!
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I love Lambic’s too, and Geueze (blends of aged Lambics) and some Wild Ales. Wild Ales are brewed with wild yeast like Lambics and some have added fruit. Many Wild Ales are in practice the same thing as a Lambic. However, unless a beer is brewed in Pajottenland in Belgium you can’t call it a Lambic. You can only call it Wild Ale. It’s the same situation as with Champagne.
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Happy St. Patrick’s Thomas. You so many beers with the photo. Anita
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Thank you so much Anita
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Such an interesting post. I don’t drink beer often but it was interesting to learn about so many different types. Hope you had a great St. Patrick’s Day.
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Thank you so much Pooja. My St. Patrick Day was great. It was just me and my wife, but still. I appreciate your nice comment.
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My pleasure and that’s great.
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I’m quite fond of IPAs. In the darker beers, I really like a good porter, especially if they include some sweet notes. Back in my homebrewing days, I did a really interesting experiment where I made a smoked ale and then added chipotle chile peppers (smoked jalapenos). It turned out quite good and was even one of my award winners at the New Mexico State Fair. The beer got even better as it aged and the flavors blended better.
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Wow that sounds really great. The BOMB! from Prairie Artisan Ales above has a little bit of pepper flavor. Also I like IPAs too. I am impressed that you won in the New Mexico State Fair. Congratulations 🏆🥇
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It was a silver medal, so not first place, but still, I feel like I did quite well with my experimental ale… and the first time I’d ever entered my beer into a competition!
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Well a silver medal is very good. I haven’t even participated in a beer brewing competition.
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