May 14
Malt Liquor Review…

I found this posted at The Wave Magazine and felt compelled to post it up for all to see. Be sure to click ‘Read More’ below for the best part:
Malt Liquor Review
We asked a widely published wine critic and Napa Valley regular to closely examine some of the finest malt liquors a $1.19 can buy.
By: Tim Teichgraeber
Malt liquor looks like beer, smells like beer, and—aside from the fact that it may be a little more bland and a little more sweet—more or less tastes like beer. Sounds harmless enough, but don’t be fooled: Malt liquor is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. I call it “sucker punch” because it tends to sneak up on you.
I guess you could say that malt liquor is like a beer that makes you want to break stuff. Weighing in at somewhere between 5.5 and 8% alcohol by volume, it can be twice as strong as regular beer, which falls somewhere between 4 and 5.5%. While a reasonable person might say, “Well, maybe I’ll just have two malt liquors instead of my usual three regular beers,” it doesn’t usually seem to work that way. Instead, folks drink about the same amount of malt liquor as they would beer, then start breaking stuff.
Malt liquor is like beer without the cultural sensitivity. If those bikini-chick Keystone and Bud Light ads drive you nuts, you should definitely steer clear of the malt liquor aisle. Some of the packaging is tasteless enough to make Jack Kent Cooke spin in his grave.
Mickey’s, the belligerent Irishman-themed brand—and the only one that seems to appeal to a broad base of white malt-liquor drinkers, also known as “swiggers”—is on the lower end of the alcohol content spectrum at 5.6%. Whether it’s because the Mickey’s brewery staff has a social conscience or doesn’t want their brew to be perceived as weak, Heileman doesn’t print the alcohol content on the bottle.
Then there’s Crazy Horse, the brand Hornell Brewing Company and G. Heileman named after the famed Ogala Sioux warrior who died trying to protect his people from, well, liquor, among other things. After eight years of protests, lawsuits, and boycotts, Stroh’s Brewing, the parent company of Heileman, agreed to pull the brand from the market and to pay seven horses, 32 Pendleton blankets, braids of tobacco, and sweet grass to the estate of Crazy Horse and the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, quickly putting allegations of insensitivity to rest once and for all.
In the late ‘80s, gangster rapper Ice Cube endorsed St. Ides in a massive poster campaign. This was long before he was tapped by the Hollywood establishment to battle giant CGI anacondas on the silver screen.
But no brewery would go so far as to endorse criminal behavior, right? Of course not! The fact that “211” is police code for armed or aggravated robbery has nothing to do with the name of 8.1% alcohol Steele Reserve 211. It’s just a coincidence. Everybody knows numerology is just a bunch of mumbo-jumbo. Steele Reserve even carries a prominent warning of its “High Gravity.” This is HIGH gravity, folks, not the kind that makes an apple fall on your head. This is the kind of gravity that crushes you, drooling, into the sidewalk.
I won’t pretend to be a malt-liquor aficionado. I am a professional wine critic who gets an endless stream of nice bottles of wine in the mail for free. I don’t have to drink malt liquor, so I generally don’t. On the other hand, I’m also a freelance writer who can’t afford to be picky about his assignments. I’ll also defend to the death a person’s right to unwind at the end of the day, or in the morning.
When the Madison, Wisconsin, Alcohol License Review Committee proposed a voluntary ban on the sale of individual bottles of malt liquor, unfairly associating the sale of 40s with “aggressive panhandling, open intoxication, public urination, theft, armed robbery, and intimidation,” at least one brave citizen had the guts to stand up for a working person’s right to relaxation.
“My two daughters work minimum wage at McDonald’s and cannot afford $40 bottles of wine,” said Carl Endres, owner of Keg’s Korner. “They deserve the right to relax after a hard day of work.”
Thanks, Carl. Thanks for looking out for the kids.
TASTING METHOD
The following nine brands were tasted blindly in Riedel Grand Cru Bordeaux (21.5 oz) stemware. Each was poured by an assistant standing out of my sight. All liquors were rated on a 10 point scale, with 1 being undrinkable and 10 being superior in all respects.
TASTING RESULTS
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Olde English “800” Malt (Pabst Brewing Co., 7.5% alcohol)
St. Ides (St. Ides Brewing Company, 7.3%)
Mickey’s (Heileman Brewing Co. 5.6%)
Colt 45 (Carling Brewery, 5.6%)
King Cobra (Anheuser Busch, 5.9%)
Schlitz Malt Liquor (Stroh Brewery, 5.9% )
Steel Reserve “211” (Steel Brewing Company, 8.1%)
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The drinks section is a nice addition..just for suggestions if taken you should blog about your own concoxions…you do have some good ones..