Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Beer Review: Point Horizon Wheat
I've heard a lot of good things about Point beers, but I haven't really liked any of the ones that I have tried...this one is no exception. Not that it's offensive, like say that horrible mesquite smoked abomination that I tried a while back, it's just that it doesn't really have any character, any uniqueness. It's as if they were trying to appeal to the least common denominator. There is a bit of a lemon/citrus tang to it that you often find in wheat ales, but other than that...bleh...
Beer Review: Odell's Red Ale
Virtually no head, coppery tint, 6.5% ABV and an IBU of 50, this is not a summer ale, it must be left over from the spring seasonals, because it tastes like a bock to me. Full malty goodness balanced by a bite of the bitters, as the 50 IBU attests. This is a full flavored brew that would go well with BBQ, or even a beef stew on a cool night.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Beer Review: Red Hook Rope Swing Summer Pilsner
Typical golden pilsner hue, but anything but the typical bland pilsner taste. Red Hook usually comes through and they did it again. During the last year it seems like pilsners are making a comeback in the craft beer business, starting with the Sam Adams Noble Pils. Rope Swing pours a bright golden with a frothy white head that is surprisingly firm for a lager. Some banana and clove like you might expect from a Hefeweizen. In the running!
Beer Review: Big Sky Summer Honey
Big Sky beers are pretty solid and this one is no exception. A full bodied, yet light flavored ale, with enough honey to sweeten it up, but not too much. Light coppery golden, small head. A little bit of apple and cinnamon in the mix, pretty drinkable, but doesn't make the Kelso 4th of July cut.
Beer Review: Anchor Steam Summer Beer
Like many "summer" beers, this one is a wheat ale, but doesn't have the typical wheaty taste to it. No distracting aftertastes and no additives of fruit or spices, just a crisp, clean, light brew to enjoy on a hot summer evening (which I did!).
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Tipping Point
Everybody has what I called a tipping point, the place where the the things that you don't like about your situation, relationship, job, church outweigh the things that you do like, and like a seesaw where one kid is heavier than the other, the daily decision of "I'm going to continue with this" flips over to "Screw this...I'm outta here". This isn't to say that this is always a conscious decision or even a rational, logical one, but somewhere, buried deep inside, it's a decision nonetheless.Why do people do things that they don't want to do when there's no apparent coercion? Why do people do things that are bad for them? The most common examples are found in abusive relationships.
Why do people stay together when one of them is beating the other or verbally abusing them? There is no one answer for everyone because everyone is different. Those who have never been in an abusive relationship wonder why a woman would stay with a man who beats her, or yells at her, or treats her like dirt. In some situations the woman really believes what she has been told by her abuser, that she is worthless, ugly, stupid, could never find another man, etc. However, in most situations the fact that there are children involved, that the abused wife often has no marketable job skills and the husband has control of the finances makes leaving the jerk a choice not without risks and consequences. There is the risk that attempting to leave would trigger even more violence and there is the risk that successfully leaving would put the abused wife in a situation where she was worse off financially than she was with her violent husband. So when is the tipping point? How bad does it have to get before a woman leaves or in extreme circumstances, shoots the bastard? It cannot be decided from the outside, there is no objective standard for when 'enough is enough". It is the perceived point of no return that determines when action will be taken to change the situation. Outside factors such as family or community support, resources, job skills, the age of the children, or self-esteem all figure into how much weight needs to be on each side of the see-saw.
Back in the late seventies the concept of a religious cult entered the common vocabulary with the People's Temple tragedy in Guyana. Forty years later there is still debate and disagreement over what constitutes a cult and just why they're a bad thing. One of the recurring themes of cult involvement and cult recovery is the concept of brainwashing. The term brainwashing originated during the Korean War where Chinese interrogators allegedly turned U.S. soldiers they had captured. Brainwashing, as it applies to so-called cults, refers to a person's religious beliefs changing so drastically that the person's free will must have been subverted somehow. Part of the reason that brainwashing is used as an explanation of not only why a person's beliefs suddenly do a U-turn, but also why abusive, controlling behavior is tolerated is that no one wants to admit that they willingly and voluntarily subjected themselves to treatment that no reasonable person would supposedly tolerate. Those who have no similar experience are sure that they themselves would never had "put up with that crap" and would have exited the situation quickly. Certainly from the vantage point of hindsight it appears that way. But what outsiders do not realize is that the "frog in the frying pan" effect is in operation. It is certain that the members of the People's Temple were not asked upon their first contact with Jim Jones to swallow poisoned Kool-Aid, but the dependency upon Jones was built step by step.
Any religion requires some cognitive dissonance, some denial of objective reality. You are asked to believe things that you can't see and interpret ordinary events in supernatural ways. Where cults differ as they they use this parallel reality to control people's lives to some extent, to exert power via faith, outside accepted societal norms. Most groups who are labeled cults base some of their appeal on differentiating themselves from mainstream religion in some fashion, whether it is purity of behavior or doctrinal uniqueness, they have to start off by convincing their potential followers that there is something wrong with contemporary society, which usually includes mainstream religion. Whether by unveiling "secret knowledge" or by helping converts overcome drug addiction, poverty or ill health, the cult leaders set themselves up as being more trustworthy than the neophyte's previous authority figures. Little by little the leader is made more dependable while religion and society are portrayed as less until the leader no longer has to demonstrate their worthiness, their rightness it is simply accepted as a given. Once that happens, the newbie is hooked. The "benefits", whether it be freedom from addictions, prosperity or access to hidden wisdom, are seen as valuable and worth keeping, losing these so-called benefits is something to be avoided at all costs. Drawbacks, whether they be intrusiveness and control, abusive behavior, or moving to Guyana are seen as a reasonable price to pay for the "benefits" derived from membership in the group. Even when the negatives become heavy-handed and overwhelming, giving up the benefits becomes scary and veteran cult members remain out of fear of the alternatives, just like an abused woman. It is only when that internal tipping point is reached that a cult member can freely walk away.
Drug use is another area where those who have never done drugs cannot understand the appeal and see only the devastation that addiction wreaks. Why do people do drugs? Because it makes them feel good. It is difficult to convince someone that something bad will happen in the future, when something good is happening now. Especially when most people are very good at denying that bad things can happen to them. We're all immortal, right? In addition to the benefits versus drawbacks that you have in the other examples, with drugs you also have the aspect of the physical addiction, which adds some additional weight to not stopping.
What ties into all of this is free will. Sure, we all have free will to walk out of a bad relationship, leave that abusive cult or quit that job that is requiring more and more and giving less and less, but how close to that tipping point are you? Your free will is somewhat constrained if leaving a bad situation puts you in a worse situation. Several years ago I had a part-time job that I really didn't like. It interfered with my sleep, restricted my flexibility at my main job, was hard on my vehicle and was an overall pain-in-the-butt! However, at the time I needed the extra income to make ends meet. As time went on the job got worse and worse, but since I still needed the income, I stayed on. Eventually a change in my financial situation took away my absolute need for that extra income, and with the weight on the two sides of the seesaw thus redistributed, I had now reached my tipping point and quit. I can envision a situation where the work environment got bad enough that I would have quit while still needing the income, or staying on even though I didn't need the money because things hadn't gotten bad, but I had reached that imbalance, that tipping point, where the negatives had finally outweighed the positives.
Do you know where your tipping point is?
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Beer Review: Weyerbacher's Heresy Imperial Stout (Aged in Oak Barrels)
This is an oak-barrel aged version of Weyerbacher's Old Heathen Imperial Stout (if you know me, you can see why I'd at least like the name). Not as thick as your typical imperial, Heresy tastes more like a brandy to me. There's a definite alcohol vapor seeping into the sinuses, with a rich chocolatey taste. Not for everyone, that's for sure, but I enjoyed it with my birthday cheesecake.
Beer Review: Sam Adams Imperial Stout
For a while this was my favorite beer until it was dethroned by Rasputin. dark, dark, dark...with a creamy dark head. Chocolate, licorice and oddly, root beer, which my wife, the non-drinker could smell after I poured it. 10.3% ABV gives it a pleasant warmth, and the flavor is overall deep and rich. Another winter beer, but with the air conditioning on, who'd notice?
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Beer Review: Sam Adams Imperial Series - Double Bock
Another offering from the Samuel Adams Imperial series, Sam Adams Double Bock is another winner. Clear coppery hue, earthy, frothy head and a 9.5% ABV! Yeah baby! They dump so much malt into this lager that you could bake a loaf of bread from your belches. You get hints of cherry and raisin and more than a little chocolate. I enjoyed a nice thick steak while drinking this and the two went together perfectly. Even though it was hotter than hell out there, i would say this is more of a late winter beer - October or November.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Beer Review: Sam Adams Imperial White
"Imperials" tend to be stouts, and I've got a Sam Adams Imperial Stout in the fridge for another day, but this is one of Sam Adams' experimental-type beers. Billed as a witbier, it has the creamy, almost butterscotch smoothness of a Belgian style, but the 10.3% ABV gives it a nice bite. There's a hint of blueberry and some unidentified spiciness, and the characteristic wheat tang. This is definitely a beer to sit an savor without any distractions.
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Beer Review: 400 Pound Monkey English IPA by Left Hand Brewing
Pale yellow color with a pure white 2-finger head. Nice hoppy bitterness, smooth maltiness with overtones of lemon and fresh-mown grass. Crisp, tastes great straight from the fridge. Went down well at 1:45AM!
Beer Review: Buffalo Bill's Orange Blossom Cream Ale
I'm going to take my beer purist hat off for a minute to tell you that this was a great "picnic beer". Absolutely no complexity or subtlety to it; if you remember Zima, this is similar: malt beverages for people who don't really know from good beer. But despite that, I can see myself sitting at the beach (if I ever see a beach again) getting some sun and knocking back a few of these babies. You can really taste the orange, similar to an orange smoothie or an Orange Julius. dare I say....a "chick beer"?
Beer Review: Shiner Smokehaus
First, let me explain what a "Helles style" beer is. According to my sources, "helles" is German for "pale", and refers to any pale lager, as opposed to a dunkel bier or dark lager.
My first thought when I saw "mesquite smoked" beer was that it would taste like a campfire...and not in a good way. And I wasn't far wrong. Any tastiness that mesquite smoking brings to meat it most certainly does not bring to beer.
I don't often pour beer out before finishing, but I made an exception in this case. This is without a doubt the most horrible tasting beet that I have ver encountered.
My first thought when I saw "mesquite smoked" beer was that it would taste like a campfire...and not in a good way. And I wasn't far wrong. Any tastiness that mesquite smoking brings to meat it most certainly does not bring to beer.
I don't often pour beer out before finishing, but I made an exception in this case. This is without a doubt the most horrible tasting beet that I have ver encountered.
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