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Small Scale Brewing is Back In the late 1970's there were less than 50 breweries in America. Here at the dawn of the new Millenium, there are well over 1500 operating breweries in America. The "Pure" Brew Almost every single one of the beers you grew up with in the US adds adjuncts (rice and/or corn) to their beer to make it lighter and less aggressive in flavor, in order to appeal to the masses. This includes our big US breweries, as well as most European, Canadian, Australian, Mexican and Japanese imports. Many of the imports actually reformulate their beers and add adjuncts (which are cheaper than barley malt) for the US market. These adjunct beers would be illegal in Germany.
Redefining Excellence Nommesen Beer is a fresh food product. It is meant to be consumed within a short period of time from when it is produced. The exact amount of time a beer can stay fresh depends on the style of beer and the conditions under which it is stored. Every large American brewery uses flavor damaging techniques such as adding preservatives or pasteurizing their beer to add shelf-life. I do not. Nommesen Beer is a pure (without quotes) brew, brewed at home using San Francisco tap water in very small batches. (Some text 'lifted' from Stone Brewing Co. so that I would have some factual text here) |