San Mig Light of course is not a low-alcohol beer...it's a low-calorie beer so you should be able to drink as much as you want without getting fat...or in MtDs case 'fatter'...Quote:
Originally Posted by Marmite the Dog
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San Mig Light of course is not a low-alcohol beer...it's a low-calorie beer so you should be able to drink as much as you want without getting fat...or in MtDs case 'fatter'...Quote:
Originally Posted by Marmite the Dog
^ clean taste
A myth.Quote:
Originally Posted by klongmaster
Not a myth :smile:Quote:
Originally Posted by klongmaster
Exactly!Quote:
Originally Posted by klongmaster
B'stard!Quote:
Originally Posted by klongmaster
I thought San Miguel is a Philippino beer, also very popular in HK. I didn't realise it's got a following in Thailand too.
It is. They have brewery in Thailand. Rayong I think. Note San Miguel has all sorts of products sold in Thailand. Everything from water to fruit juice. I believe Red Horse and Blue Ice are San Miguel products.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ramseth
But what about this
That klongy guy ain't came up and said nothing about anyone else being full of shit on the formaldehyde thing, no apologies or nothing. smart asshole...Quote:
OMG one would expect better from you BG...one of THE greatest urban myths ever to come out of Thailand...
formaldehyde
Damn and that did not come out of Thailand, because we drank a lot of formaldehyde in Viet Nam beer in the 60s.
A security guard in my building that my family have become chummy with says his brother works at the Chang brewery, and that said brother has warned him about drinking Chang, as in don't. Oddly enough, it still tastes better than Singh, but then again that isn't much of a claim to fame.
I find that the prices on Belgian and German imports at the local supermarkets aren't all that bad. Try a bottle or two, but not much more, of Paulaner's "Salvator".
Don't know if San mig are doing this anywhere else in Thailand but in Phuket if the bar buy's 10 case's of San Mig light they provide a a Thai/Philippino band and 4 mini skirted cute promotion girls.
So i have been drinking quite a lot of San Mig lately.
Beer lao is my beer of choice but can not get it a lot of bars here
Does Singha give anyone else a really sore throat.
Beer Lao is my drink of choice or San Miguel light, Singha and Chang just rot your guts and the hangover is enough to put you off. Heineken is drinkable out of the bottle or can but the draught heineken is vile if the pipes are not cleaned properly.
I f I had the choice of any beers it would be these three:-
1. Dos Equis (Lager or beer both are excellent)
2. Lowenbrau (Munich beer excellent taste)
3. Grolsch (in the flip bottle bottle great taste too)
Not that I know of, but if you drink enough and kinda pass out I have heard that it will make your asshole sore.., do you drink enough to black out when it makes your throat sore? if so maybe you had better set up a cctv to see just what your friends are doing. :rofl:Quote:
Originally Posted by richie22
Many Japanese brands of canned beer label themselves as "nama biru" (生ビール). The English translation on the labelling is "dry beer" but more literally it should mean "raw beer". What does it actually mean? Does it mean draft in a can?
My favorite commercial beer of all was Tuborg Copenhagen, next to that was San Miguel Manila, I liked it better than San M Philippines
Dry beer has a bit of a different meaning in different parts of the world. But it is basically a pale lager that has been brewed to the point that almost all of the sugar has been turned into alcohol via a long fermentation period. Thus most “dry’ beers originally had a higher alcohol content, and also tend to more tame on the flavor side of things. However, in many US “dry” beers this is not necessarily the case. In the US the term “dry” generally indicates a beer with a light taste on the front end and little to no taste on the back end.
As for the Japanese terms - I can't read Japanese so I can not comment on the Japanese spelling, but I thought "nama biru" basically means draft beer, and I thought dry beer was "karakuchi" - al la Ashai Super Dry - but I could be wrong, or it could just be a matter of current marketing. Along the lines of bottled "draft" beer that is sold in some areas of the world.
Thanks Bugs. You've been very helpful. Yes, Asahi (朝日) uses "karachuchi" (辛口) on its labels, another term that I don't really understand. To my basic knowledge of the Japanese language, "karakuchi" means spicy taste, but apparently Asahi uses it to mean "super dry" and I haven't even figure out what that means. LOL!
Actually, I've spoken to some Japanese friends before. None of them seems to be sure or consistently certain. The closest reasonably believeable reply was that, it means as natural as possible in the brewing process. The next closest reasonably acceptable reply was like, it's something that makes you enjoy the taste of your beer without getting drunk faster.
Most of the time in advanced countrys the beer is not imported but made in country under contract, Tuborg in Oregon is made by the Blitz Winehard brewery I think, anyway it is an Oregon place, same with San Mag. it is made in the USA and not the same stuff as it is in flipperlandia..
Just as San Mag here is local brew. Corona in the states is local brew too.
I had a nice one tonight in that horrible place, Witch Tavern, a big draft Leffe
Whilst i have read about the Chinese brewers that use formaldehyde, i've also read that it is a myth that the same thing is going on in Thailand.
I'm off to 7/11 in a minute to get myself six large Changs.
I first tried Chang beer after I saw the very impressive Karabao elephant warriors advertisement in the early 2000s. To me, it tasted somewhere between Singha and Carlsberg Special Brew.
Neither sight nor sound of him since!Quote:
Originally Posted by Fast Eddie
when chang first came out it was super strong like special brew
I remember having 3 long necks, I think!
My recommendation for the best Thai beer
https://teakdoor.com/images/imported/2008/11/701.jpg
Or get some dunkel at Tawandaeng
Best Beer
^ used to be my beer of choice till I found I had elevated blood glucose
I've long stopped any consumption of Chang, I like Singha but I usually drink LEO at home.
If we could have Beer Lao on sale here it will be my choice, especially the "Lao Dark" or Lao dam; yummy. ;)
https://teakdoor.com/Gallery/albums/u...erlao-dark.jpg
Archa is my favourite cheapo; has to be good as the Aussies gave it a Gold award :)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ramseth https://teakdoor.com/images/td_defaul...s/viewpost.gif
Thanks Bugs. You've been very helpful. Yes, Asahi (朝日) uses "karachuchi" (辛口) on its labels, another term that I don't really understand. To my basic knowledge of the Japanese language, "karakuchi" means spicy taste. . .
The 辛 in karakuchi in reference to sake, wine, and more recently, beer, refers to "dry", not "spicy"; dry as opposed to sweet. The nama 生 in nama-biiru means simply "draft." The Japanese brew the best beer in the Asian region, hands down, especially their craft beers, but the mass-produced Ebisu- gold can, green-can Pilsen, and Ebisu Red- are all excellent, especially the green. It is available at a very nice if slightly expensive yakitoriya (chicken on a stick restaurant) on Sukh soi 26, the name of which eludes me- just down 26 on the right, across from Tokyo Joe's. If you can't Ebisu, the Sapporo Black Label is similar. Kirin is also drinkable. Asahi Super Dry is. . .whatever it is it isn't beer- Asahi products are mostly lousy, except for the stout which they brew annually in small batches and don't export. The best thing about Asahi is the giant golden turd on their building in Asakusa, Tokyo Panoramio - Photo of 'Golden Turd' (Asahi Building) .
By the way, here's to all the other Beer Lao drinkers- a toast to the best local beer, especially since neither San Mig Pilsen nor the delightful San Mig Cerveza Negra are available here. Just back from the PI, where a bottle of the Philippines' only manufactured export is just 50 pesos (35 baht) or less in the bars; that seems like a good thing when you first get there.
I had an Asahi phase for about 6 months a few years back. Never see it in the 7/11 nowadays.
Yup, good beer.
Australia is worse than Thailand for beer though - anyone with a bit of nous could make a fortune in Australia. All they would have to do is convince the convicts that VB is NOT beer. Coopers is decent, but still a long way short of the required standard.
I noticed that, a bit foked off as I liked the big bottles, might ask the reps why it's gone. Just had Asahi draught installed in the restaurant I'm working on so happy days anyway :)Quote:
Originally Posted by melvbot
trying a nice dark beer Erdinberg now, not too bad
Are you sure?Quote:
Originally Posted by Butterfly
^ yeah, why ?
Never heard of it and nor has Google.Quote:
Originally Posted by Butterfly
^ interesting, everything was in Bavarian or some other barbarian language ? I can keep the bottle and give it to you next time I am in cowboy if you need it for reference :)
don't like too much the dark beer though,
^ nice shape of bottle?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Butterfly