Author Topic: Super Bowl Beer Showdown: Atlanta’s SweetWater Vs. New England’s Sam Adams  (Read 803 times)

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Offline mountaineer

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Super Bowl Beer Showdown: Atlanta’s SweetWater Vs. New England’s Sam Adams
 February 3, 2017
 By Brad Jackson
[excerpted]
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On Super Bowl Sunday, you’re going to drink beer. Let me make an argument for you to drink good beer. Don’t get roped in by the Clydesdale commercials, or think that Bud’s for you. Head to your local grocery or liquor store and get some good beer.

If you want beer to match the teams, I have some options for you: A beer from Atlanta, and a beer from New England.

Coming in from Atlanta, we have SweetWater Brewing Company’s Hash Brown, a hop infused India Style Brown Ale. Hash Brown is a bottle-conditioned beer, which means it finishes the brewing process in the bottle itself. Here’s the scientific explanation of what bottle conditioning means: “The bottle-conditioning technique involves bottling beer that contains little or no carbon dioxide and then adding priming sugars that yeast will ferment in the bottle.” This biochemical process gives the beer a natural carbonation.

Bottle-conditioning gives Hash Brown a solid head that sticks around as you drink the beer, sort of like a Guinness. The carbonation is smooth and the flavors complex. You get the warm, tasty notes of the brown malts with an interesting hoppy kick. That kick comes in part from “hop hash.”  ...

Representing the New England area is Hopscape, a hopped wheat ale from Samuel Adams. It’s hard to find a bar or beer seller that doesn’t have some type of Sam Adams available. Their lager is the easiest to find, and it’s a decent beer, but when they play with ingredients and change it up a bit, Samuel Adams can make some seriously tasty brews.

On Election Night I featured their Rebel IPA, which is a hoppy, tasty, but not too overpowering IPA. Today’s brew is Hopscape, their winter seasonal beer. This gold-colored wheat ale is brewed with four hops: Centennial, Chinook, Citra, and Zeus, giving it nice piney and citrusy notes. It’s not an IPA, it’s a wheat beer, but these hops give it an extra layer of flavor that makes this beer stand out.  ...
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Offline mountaineer

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As a Steelers fan, I really dislike New England.  I've never tried either of these brews, but am not a fan of any wheat beer. So that would leave me with Atlanta, except I don't really give a rat's posterior about this game.

What to do, what to do ...
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