Cheap Beer Thread

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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Roquefort Robert » Mon Oct 18, 2010 9:38 pm

The Beav wrote:Had a case of this for after last call shift drinks:



It's not all that cheap, and it tastes like bacon.

Probably shouldn't have grilled it then.
By using the El Dorado Atmospheric and Oceanic temperatures thermal map. I caculated the contrary direction where the polar jet stream is going and it didn't look pretty.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Megatron » Thu Oct 21, 2010 4:01 pm

Please come to Michigan. Please come to Michigan!

Yuengling Beer Thinks Big, Moves Methodically -
After 181 Years, Local Beer Stops Playing Hard to Get


By DAVID KESMODEL

POTTSVILLE, Pa.—D.G. Yuengling & Son Inc. has become the seventh-largest U.S. beer supplier and is growing rapidly.

You wouldn't know it by looking at the owner's car.

Dick Yuengling Jr., 67 years old, drives to work in a 2002 Ford Taurus that he bought used. On a recent morning, the gray sedan sat coated with dust, papers strewn across the front and back seats.

"He won't get it washed because he won't spend money on a car wash," says David Casinelli, Yuengling's chief operating officer.

Mr. Yuengling's frugal ways and his deliberate approach to growth are part of the formula that has enabled the 181-year-old regional brewer to survive industry consolidation and become a sought-after brand among distributors, retailers and consumers.

Now, the fifth-generation brewing scion and sole owner is poised to make his riskiest move yet to expand the nation's oldest beer maker. Yuengling (pronounced ying-ling) announced last week that it signed a letter of intent to buy a former Coors brewery in Memphis, Tenn. The facility would be the Pennsylvania brewer's largest and could more than double the company's overall capacity and allow it to expand distribution into multiple states beyond its 13-state footprint in the Eastern U.S.

Bar owners in such states as Ohio and Kentucky would like to be able to offer Yuengling Traditional Lager, but it's unclear how Yuengling beers will fare with consumers in new markets. Some of Yuengling's success stems from its cachet as a hard-to-get brew.
Yuengling Prepares to Go West

The gift shop of the historic Yuengling brewery in Pottsville, Pa., is a stop along the daily tours of the factory.

Nick Faulkner, 31, thought Yuengling was an import the first time he drank it, in Florida. (Many people mistakenly think it's Chinese.) Now the Jacksonville firefighter and Ohio native owns a website called BringYuenglingToOhio.com. "It's just about the only beer I'll drink," he says, and he wants his pals in Ohio to be able to buy it.

Mr. Yuengling says the purchase price for the Memphis facility is in "the $20 million range" and that the brewer will need to make additional investments in machinery.

"If this deal goes through, we are going to grow very slowly and methodically," the chief executive says. "We are around for 181 years and we're in no hurry."

Indeed, Mr. Yuengling and his company seem to have one foot in the past and one in the present. Mr. Yuengling doesn't use email and got his first cell phone last year. The company has about 250 employees, compared with about 700 at Samuel Adams maker Boston Beer Co., which is about the same size in terms of sales volume, though it distributes in 50 states.

The white-haired Mr. Yuengling wears jeans to work, smokes Marlboros and rinses out Styrofoam coffee cups so he can re-use them. (Mr. Yuengling says he keeps a nicer car at home than the one he drives for work.)

Mr. Yuengling is cautious with money, he says, because he remembers hard times in the late 1950s and early 1960s when a veteran employee at the brewer—then run by his grandfather—warned the younger man that the company was barely making payroll and urged him to pursue another career.

Yuengling was founded in 1829 by German immigrant David Gottlieb Yuengling. (Yuengling is German for "young man.") The company long served thirsty coal miners in this hilly region northwest of Philadelphia. Dick Yuengling bought the brewer from his father in 1985 and later hired Mr. Casinelli to revamp sales and marketing.

Mr. Yuengling spends most of his work days, which begin before dawn, dealing with bottling, packaging and logistics. Mr. Casinelli handles day-to-day business affairs. "Dick is very entrepreneurial, but he's a lousy day-to-day manager," Mr. Casinelli says.

"I'm a production guy," says Mr. Yuengling. "That's what I grew up doing."

Well-known in New Jersey and Delaware as well as its home state, Yuengling moved into the Southeast a decade ago after buying a brewery in Tampa, Fla. After a slow start, the brand now is growing quickly in the region.

In all, the company posted a 12% rise in sales volume, to two million barrels, last year—the only double-digit growth rate among the 10 largest U.S. beer suppliers, according to newsletter Beer Marketer's Insights. (Mr. Yuengling won't disclose dollar sales or profits.)

The brewer is flourishing while the industry, hurt by high unemployment among its core customers, is down in volume by about 2% this year. One reason for Yuengling's relative success is that many drinkers view it as being in the same camp as microbrews and other specialty domestic beers, though its main brands are priced similarly to Bud Light and Miller Lite.

The brewer is getting more aggressive in its advertising. New print and television ads show its amber-hued Yuengling Light Lager—darker than the major light beers—alongside its foes and says "other lights pale in comparison."

Yuengling could encounter difficulty attracting drinkers as it advances westward, where many haven't heard of the brand. Competition from small-batch "craft" brewers also is likely to be stiffer in some states than it was in some of the markets in the Southeast that it entered in recent years.

Surging demand for Yuengling's brews has created internal challenges, says Mr. Casinelli. For instance, he says, he finds it hard sometimes to persuade Mr. Yuengling to invest in personnel.

Mr. Casinelli says he and other managers sometimes pursue projects in secret, for fear that Mr. Yuengling will shoot them down before they get off the ground. Workers, for example, began testing an India pale ale at the Tampa brewery without telling the owner. (The product hasn't been introduced yet.)

Mr. Yuengling says he doesn't mind the practice, because Mr. Casinelli eventually brings new concepts to him for discussion.

Mr. Yuengling says he would like to leave the company in good shape for the next generation, and hopes that one or more of his daughters—two of the four work at the brewer—will buy it from him. He has no plans to retire. "I don't know what I'd do if I didn't do this," he says. "I'd go crazy."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... orsPicks_2
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby frank - up in grand blanc » Thu Oct 21, 2010 5:29 pm

We always bring home a case or two of Yuengling when out east. Not necessarily a cheap beer, but definitely a more enjoyable drink than what passes for cheap around here.

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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Ya Mar » Mon Oct 25, 2010 2:15 pm

My hotel in DC had it as their happy hour beer. $2.50 at a nice DC hotel for a bottle of beer was too good a deal to pass up. I had about 14.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Doctor Detroit » Mon Nov 15, 2010 1:45 pm

Pardon Me, Would You Have Any Pabst Blue Ribbon?
Posted by Evan Osnos

Somewhere over the Pacific, Pabst Blue Ribbon began putting on airs.

That reliably blue-collar Milwaukee lager, later adopted by unbearable hipsters on the coasts, has turned up in China. And P.B.R., best known in the U.S. for being the cheapest beer on the grocery-store shelf, has—like so many expatriates before it—taken the move as an opportunity to change its image. For a beer, that appears to involve an elegant glass bottle and a fantastically ridiculous price tag. One bottle: forty-four dollars.



Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/e ... z15NGJuEAs

X-post to non-cheap beer?
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby The Beav » Tue Nov 16, 2010 7:48 am

Doctor Detroit wrote:
Pardon Me, Would You Have Any Pabst Blue Ribbon?
Posted by Evan Osnos

Somewhere over the Pacific, Pabst Blue Ribbon began putting on airs.

That reliably blue-collar Milwaukee lager, later adopted by unbearable hipsters on the coasts, has turned up in China. And P.B.R., best known in the U.S. for being the cheapest beer on the grocery-store shelf, has—like so many expatriates before it—taken the move as an opportunity to change its image. For a beer, that appears to involve an elegant glass bottle and a fantastically ridiculous price tag. One bottle: forty-four dollars.



Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/e ... z15NGJuEAs

X-post to non-cheap beer?


Why not send the Chinese a few million bottles and pay off our debt?
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Putski » Tue Nov 16, 2010 11:09 pm

The last time I had PBR it was served as "the good stuff" warm at a former coworkers secret internet cafe outside Tianjin, China in 98. Leading edge of hipsterism right here......
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby D-Day » Fri Mar 01, 2013 11:25 am

This is for the other non-Michigan poster here (or the rest of you, if you feel like heading to Toledo). If you get a chance to try Yuengling Bock (it's a seasonal)....get it. Very tasty with a good hop finish...$6.99 for six. Get two. I did. Well worth it

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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby middle aged female » Fri Mar 01, 2013 11:51 am

D-Day wrote:This is for the other non-Michigan poster here (or the rest of you, if you feel like heading to Toledo). If you get a chance to try Yuengling Bock (it's a seasonal)....get it. Very tasty with a good hop finish...$6.99 for six. Get two. I did. Well worth it


I had bock beer one time in my life, and it gagged me. Traditionally, it's what's left in the bottom of the barrel in the spring, before they brew the fresh batch.
And, at the time, I would drink anything with alcohol in it, including cooking sherry.

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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Roquefort Robert » Fri Mar 01, 2013 2:44 pm

I like Amber Bock a lot and I like Yuengling. Win-Win.
By using the El Dorado Atmospheric and Oceanic temperatures thermal map. I caculated the contrary direction where the polar jet stream is going and it didn't look pretty.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby The Beav » Fri Mar 01, 2013 10:14 pm

Roquefort Robert wrote:I like Amber Bock a lot and I like Yuengling. Win-Win.



I went to Whiskey In The Jar tonight just because they have Shiner Bock.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby RoryKasel » Tue Mar 05, 2013 10:19 pm

Image

At $12.49 for a 30 pack I've acquired quite the taste for Hamm Canwiches.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Roquefort Robert » Tue Mar 05, 2013 11:38 pm

The Beav wrote:
Roquefort Robert wrote:I like Amber Bock a lot and I like Yuengling. Win-Win.



I went to Whiskey In The Jar tonight just because they have Shiner Bock.


No, you went there because the word "Whiskey" is in their name.
By using the El Dorado Atmospheric and Oceanic temperatures thermal map. I caculated the contrary direction where the polar jet stream is going and it didn't look pretty.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby Sterile Whites 48313 » Wed Mar 06, 2013 10:37 am

RoryKasel wrote:Image

At $12.49 for a 30 pack I've acquired quite the taste for Hamm Canwiches.


Ahhhhh, from the land of sky blue waters. Dad either had Hamms, Rolling Rock, or Strohs in the fridge at all times.
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Re: Cheap Beer Thread

Postby middle aged female » Wed Mar 06, 2013 10:50 am

Sterile Whites 48313 wrote:
RoryKasel wrote:Image

At $12.49 for a 30 pack I've acquired quite the taste for Hamm Canwiches.


Ahhhhh, from the land of sky blue waters. Dad either had Hamms, Rolling Rock, or Strohs in the fridge at all times.

Don't forget Weidemann's. Best $5 a case beer out there

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