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Location: On the edge of tomorrow looking back at yesterday Gender:
Posted:
Apr 21, 2026 - 7:17am
Coaxial wrote:
Wow, just wow. Where do they come up with these assholes?
These are the weak minded dickâs with small mushrooms in their pants who think they have all the power to control, but are grasping for joy in their empty pocket. You know the old saying, â Is that a Tootsie Roll in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?â Nope itâs only my joy, a roll of quarters.
I like to go to those porn sites to watch their frustrated wifeâs grind for a living since they canât get it at home and arenât allowed to work in the world along with their entitled
daughter's acting out for attention. Am I right Jeffrey and Donny?
You should wear clothes that don't match the recliner. It will make it easier for the paramedics to separate you when the time comes. But you know, that's just me telling people what to do again.
We-eell, to really geek-out, it's the shoulder of the bottle that does the work, but if by long neck you mean a Bordeaux style, then I see where you're coming from. BTW, interesting though the suggestion that Port bottles tend to have an extra bulge to acommodate sediment is, I'd say it was bollocks, as a chap would decant his port into a suitable decanter, whilst a gentleman would...well, he wouldn't. The butler would.
Come the revolution....
Mild. It was always the mild that unscrupulous landlords would tip the ullage into, on the basis that it was too dark to see through.
Location: Still in the tunnel, looking for the light. Gender:
Posted:
Jun 15, 2012 - 5:27pm
islander wrote:
I'm with you, the whole point of a long neck bottle is to keep the yeast from getting in the glass. If I want a beer that's hard to see through I'll call for a porter.
We-eell, to really geek-out, it's the shoulder of the bottle that does the work, but if by long neck you mean a Bordeaux style, then I see where you're coming from. BTW, interesting though the suggestion that Port bottles tend to have an extra bulge to acommodate sediment is, I'd say it was bollocks, as a chap would decant his port into a suitable decanter, whilst a gentleman would...well, he wouldn't. The butler would.
Come the revolution....
Mild. It was always the mild that unscrupulous landlords would tip the ullage into, on the basis that it was too dark to see through.
Now, you see, I'd normally go off on a rant about how brewers that think they are being "authentic" by encouraging the glopping of the entire contents of a bottle-conditioned ale into a glass without considering the use of finings to be an anachronism dating back to the first Friday night down the local tavern after the switch from pewter tankards to clear glass suddenly caused the beeriati to collectively say "what the hell is this murky crap? Go away and brew something that I can see through, at least then I'll know if that bastard of a publican has been selling me the dregs of the barrel.
Dregs of the barrel. Brings me neatly back to finings and clarity. Brewers and publicans spend a great deal of time and effort making sure that once the yeasty army have done their work they are retired to the bottom of the firkin or bottle, to snooze away their retirement, content that theirs was a job well done.
So in the name of all that is good in the world of beer LEAVE THEM ALONE TO SLUMBER IN THE DREGS OF THE BOTTLE OR THE FIRKIN.
On slightly calmer refection I wonder if US brewers consider a yeasty haze as a badge of honour - a way of saying that "yes, I use live yeast and am proud of it!". Hmmm.
Sorry, /Britishbeermonomania
I'm with you, the whole point of a long neck bottle is to keep the yeast from getting in the glass. If I want a beer that's hard to see through I'll call for a porter.
I am extraordinarily happy in my life right now, I think happier than I have ever been.
And people always enjoy being around me, I am fun and funny, and people always have a good time hanging out with me. You are making a judgment about me. I have no need or desire to please you in any way.
I am just playing with you, you conservatives are so humorless.
No, simply responding to what you wrote.
islander wrote:
c) Not really germane, but yes (as do most people, liberal, conservative, religious, old, geeky....). But the majority of us have some combination of satisfaction, modesty, decorum, restraint and common sense not to post our errant desires on a web board, or flirt with the first person to pay them a compliment.
hippiechick wrote:
I have none of those things you mentioned, and I like it that way
But once again, never let facts get in the way of the point you are trying to make.
And what exactly do you think makes me a conservative? My fiscal responsibility?
Location: Still in the tunnel, looking for the light. Gender:
Posted:
Jun 15, 2012 - 5:05pm
islander wrote:
Alternate definition of indignant froth: The result of an improperly poured beer.
Now, you see, I'd normally go off on a rant about how brewers that think they are being "authentic" by encouraging the glopping of the entire contents of a bottle-conditioned ale into a glass without considering the use of finings to be an anachronism dating back to the first Friday night down the local tavern after the switch from pewter tankards to clear glass suddenly caused the beeriati to collectively say "what the hell is this murky crap? Go away and brew something that I can see through, at least then I'll know if that bastard of a publican has been selling me the dregs of the barrel.
Dregs of the barrel. Brings me neatly back to finings and clarity. Brewers and publicans spend a great deal of time and effort making sure that once the yeasty army have done their work they are retired to the bottom of the firkin or bottle, to snooze away their retirement, content that theirs was a job well done.
So in the name of all that is good in the world of beer LEAVE THEM ALONE TO SLUMBER IN THE DREGS OF THE BOTTLE OR THE FIRKIN.
On slightly calmer refection I wonder if US brewers consider a yeasty haze as a badge of honour - a way of saying that "yes, I use live yeast and am proud of it!". Hmmm.
I am extraordinarily happy in my life right now, I think happier than I have ever been.
And people always enjoy being around me, I am fun and funny, and people always have a good time hanging out with me. You are making a judgment about me. I have no need or desire to please you in any way.
I am just playing with you, you conservatives are so humorless.
No, simply responding to what you wrote.
islander wrote:
c) Not really germane, but yes (as do most people, liberal, conservative, religious, old, geeky....). But the majority of us have some combination of satisfaction, modesty, decorum, restraint and common sense not to post our errant desires on a web board, or flirt with the first person to pay them a compliment.
hippiechick wrote:
I have none of those things you mentioned, and I like it that way
But once again, never let facts get in the way of the point you are trying to make.
And what exactly do you think makes me a conservative? My fiscal responsibility?
b) You should try a few. Satisfaction goes a long way in making you pleasant to be around and happy with your life, and common sense would keep you out of a lot of the crap you find yourself in around here.
I am extraordinarily happy in my life right now, I think happier than I have ever been.
And people always enjoy being around me, I am fun and funny, and people always have a good time hanging out with me. You are making a judgment about me. I have no need or desire to please you in any way.
I am just playing with you, you conservatives are so humorless.
I have none of those things you mentioned, and I like it that way
a) we know, sheesh.
b) You should try a few. Satisfaction goes a long way in making you pleasant to be around and happy with your life, and common sense would keep you out of a lot of the crap you find yourself in around here.