Thursday 14 January 2016

The joy of drinking copious amounts of beer with gusto and abandonment

One photograph was taken in Munich during Oktoberfest in 2012, while I was waiting for the bus to take me to what is laughingly called Munich-West Airport; the other snap comes from a visit to Pivovar Zatec three days before. On that Saturday morning I think I was drinking their 11˚ beer, which was superb (my notes: ‘delicately hopped, good mid palate sweetness, dry semi-bitter finish that lingers, grainy undercurrent that gives it a crisp chewy character’). 

There is an immense sense of joy in drinking beer that those who come up with guidelines about how much we should drink seem to miss. There’s a sociability about it when it’s drunk in a bar or a pub — the beer is a bridge between people, transporting ideas, jokes and gossip, lightening up moods, bringing on smiles and also giving you a chance to make friends, especially if you’re a new kid in town (yes of course there’s the dark reflective nature of too much beer but I’m a grin reaper rather than a grim reaper). So then there’s that moment when the first beer of the day hits ground zero in your mouth, washes over the palate and calves great chunks off that iceberg that we call day-to-day life, the cares and hairpin cracks that we carry with us are gone for a while. More people should try it.


4 comments:

  1. Adrian, you may enjoy Seattle beerfest this year- just sayin'---


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  2. Adrian, you may enjoy Seattle beerfest this year- just sayin'---


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  3. I fully understand the sentiment. I think sometimes people drink beer that is too strong. There is a Joy in 'quaffing' a few pints of a delicious session beer.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I fully understand the sentiment. I think sometimes people drink beer that is too strong. There is a Joy in 'quaffing' a few pints of a delicious session beer.

    ReplyDelete