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What's the consensus on whether to fridge bottled beers or not? I'm thinking IPA mainly but I tried a bottle of this stout last night and was a little surprised to see it said best served chilled (although some drink chilled Guinness I suppose)
http://www.cheshirebrewhouse.co.uk/product/lindow/
like any beer is all has it's temperature. As the Aussies hate hearing you chill the shit out of it to hide the shit taste
the only way to serve beer is chilled when its crap.
Good beer don't need it. Your cellar has to be the right temperature though.
I chill it all, don't like a warm pint.
_tom_ - Member
I chill it all, don't like a warm pint.
Do you chill red wine?
No but I don't really drink much wine.
honestly try letting a beer warm up, something like a good stout should be warmer, an IPA comes to live once it's out of the fridge.
Proper ale - no! But then not warm either, cellar cool.
Chilled is for those with no taste.
Cellar temp is about right.
Cooler than ambient temperature, but that's it.
12-14 degC, warmer than your fridge, cooler than your house.
Drink it how you like it and bollocks to the wine / beer snobs
Red wine room temp but what was room temp when they invented red wine
certainly not 20c
[url= http://www.camra.org.uk/in-the-pub ]CAMRA's take on temperature[/url]
trout - Member
Drink it how you like it and bollocks to the wine / beer snobs
only suggesting that people try, it's only 1 beer
Red wine room temp but what was room temp when they invented red wine
certainly not 20c
Given its earlier origins it would be pretty warm.
warm beer is for odd balls.
12-14 degC, warmer than your fridge, cooler than your house.
That's about the same temperature as my house 🙁
12-14 degC, warmer than your fridge, cooler than your house.That's about the same temperature as my house
Rather you than me mate 😆
in my yoof I drank a fair bit of Newcastle Brown and always preferred it warm, later they put the thing on the label that changed colour when it was cold, don't know why some kind of marketing ploy I expect.
Try it at different temperatures, see what you prefer. Simples.
I tend to stick paler things like IPA in the fridge, something dark and chewy would go in the cupboard. Though my kitchen is pretty much 'cellar temperature' most of the time.
You chill shit-tasting beer to disguise it. That is why lager is served cold.
I cannot stand it when you go into a pub, get a pint of something you know is decent, you can tell it is decent from the faint taste available, but it is too cold.
Chilling ale is just plain wrong.
2-14 degC, warmer than your fridge, cooler than your house.
Do you chill red wine?
Yes. Sometimes. It's quite nice, in the right context, and with the right wine.
Cellar temperature will be about 8-10C not 15 or so.
Quite often though, you're drinking beer for its cooling, thirst-quenching and refreshing properties, so the taste or hint of a taste you can ascertain whilst it's chilled is a secondary consideration. If that's what you're after, you don't want a pint of gravy.
As a general rule, [i]Chez McDef[/i], light coloured beers go in the fridge, dark-coloured beers go in the drinks cupboard, a draughty wee hole adjacent to the leccy meter on the colder, north-facing side of the house.
So of the beers I regularly drink, something like Badger's Poachers Choice would go in the cupboard, and Hopping Hare would go in the fridge.
Also, if you check the labels on decent red wine for a recommended serving temperature, it's [url= https://www.vintecclub.com/best-temp/ ]quite a bit below[/url] what most people would regard as room temperature in your average centrally-heated house.
Chill it, but let it stand out for a while before opening/drinking.
Too cold straight from the fridge.
Haze has it right above.
You chill shit-tasting beer to disguise it. That is why lager is served cold.
Not all lager is shit.
My mother talks of when she used to go and get my grandad bottled beer from the pub to drink at home, he used to take the poker out of the fire and dip it in the glass of beer to warm it up, i doubt he cared too much quite exactly what temperature it was to be honest as long as the deep chill was off it.
I like a slightly on the cool side ale, nothing wrong with that at all.
Bottled ale needs chilling. They nearly all taste the same anyway so it's like cola - ie best served just below freezing and be grateful you have something to go with food 8)
Draught ales are best pulled with the cellar temperature at exactly (satisfyingly exhales) 'Aaaaa' degrees in relation to outside temperature plus or minus personal core temperature depending upon exhertion levels prior to imbibing.
If too warm you don't exhale with satisfied aaaaah.
If too cold for both ambient and body temp you are just grateful for a cool drink and could probably have ordered iced soda and lime.
This is not an exact science and they may or may not be numbers attached - but after 34 yrs of ale-drinking I know what is too warm or cold.
Chilled, USA stylee FTW! If the glass ain't frosted . . . 😡
I have no taste 😆
Chilled, USA stylee FTW! If the glass ain't frosted . . .
I have no taste
Most American beer not only has little or no taste, it has little or no alchohol in it either.
And I have drunk American beer in America. Michelob, 3.2ABV. Like making love in a boat. That was draught, not bottled.
Try it at different temperatures, see what you prefer. Simples.
Try a couple of temperatures and see which you prefer it at. Not all palates are identical - so what's right for you will not be right for everybody else.
As for people who look down on you for how you enjoy your beverages - ignore them.
Used to think warm beer was odd and never liked the taste in pubs, but then found I was drinking tepid bland watery beer and that was the problem. Once I discovered real ales, pale ales, IPA and such stuff it all started making sense and the beer was much nicer also.
That said, in the States they serve it all chilled and they've got quite into their micro brews and pale/IPA stuff which does actually seem nice they way they serve it chilled. Not sure it's just the style they brew that works that way. I've noticed a few local breweries mark some beers as better a little chilled and others more around room temperature and usually they're right.
Guinness Extra Cold... no. Horrible. But then Guinness is meh anyway.
Lager... chilled. Especially with curry, which has to be with lager, not ales.
Red wine, absolutely not chilled. Ruins it. White wine is opposite. It's not just snobbery, it's just scientific fact 😀
p.s. Red Rock... nice stuff 😀 . Likewise Squatters. Talking of chilled there's a bar in SLC that has ice along the bar to keep beers chilled. Anyway, indeed there's loads of decent American beers. Just steer clear of the redneck crap like Bud, Cors, Michelob. It's all like drinking Fosters. Nasty. Avoid sports bars and you can get decent beer 😉
Most American beer not only has little or no taste, it has little or no alchohol in it either.
Either you mean only the mass produced big brand beers...Bud, Coors, Miller, etc, or you're just talking out of your arse?
I think that if it's chilled to much it can loose it's taste , you don't get much head on them either , so tend to drink mine just around room temperature or just below.
Cupboard under stairs on outside wall temp for me, ideally!
Quite often though, you're drinking beer for its cooling, thirst-quenching and refreshing properties,
No, no I'm not or very rarely.
r you mean only the mass produced big brand beers...Bud, Coors, Miller, etc, or you're just talking out of your arse?
The later.
Bottled ale needs chilling. They nearly all taste the same anyway so it's like cola - ie best served just below freezing and be grateful you have something to go with food
Nonsense, there's as much variety in bottled ales as in draft ales.
Bottled beer comes out of my cold garage at just the right temperature.
I like all beer chilled. I'm mainly an ipa or pale ale drinker where posible, but I need it to be cool and refreshing. I'm constantly hot, sweaty and thirsty, and tend to guzzle water and booze. Horses for courses. Warm thick ale just makes me think of sunday dinner, which I'm not really a fan of 😐
Whole stack of local Hogs Back beers in the kitchen in bottles and no way I'd chill them. They are all different and very much different in flavour.
Personally I find drafts can be hit and miss. Sometimes wonderful, sometimes plain awful for the same beer.
Usually chill in the fridge, usual storage spot is a little warm though I suppose I could find a cooler place. Got a taste for cold beer when I lived in a warm country...it warms in the glass anyway at the rate I usually drink them.

