Does canned beer lose something (or gain something undesirable) in its storage? It seems like beer is always bottled like 95% of the time. But cans are lighter and easier to open.
by the way, is it normal to be aroused by giant slimy things smothering and sucking on entire female bodies? I guess its sort of like tentacle adult entertainment.
What beer are you on about? real beers like ale’s and porters and stouts
or shitty beers/lagers like coors and bud? stella fosters labbats carlsberg
Either way as quite the beer connoisseur i would always suggest bottled beer over canned, even with shitty beers like coors bud which are tasteless chemical fueled rats piss anyway taste even worse in a can.
If you’re drinking real beer real hops and grain beer not the piss water that most mass brewed beers are, then from my experience the hoppier the beer the more drink able it is from a can, some say it’s even better from a can than the bottle a beer like adnams ghostship is a good canned beer, americans do some really nice real ipa’s
People say you’re supposed to drink beer from glasses not bottles or cans, your ment to pour it so you can expose it to air, but i’ve never had a problem with bottled beer flavours at all
this is a small thing from the experts
Brewers claim that advances in technology mean canned beer should taste the same as draught or bottled versions. Nevertheless, there is often a slight metallic pick-up from cans. Glass, on the other hand, is neutral and doesn’t impact on beer flavour. However, bottled beer runs the risk of being “light struck” if it stands on supermarket shelves with bright, hot lights. Brown bottles may look boring, but the colour is the best protector of beer. Green bottles are less good and clear glass is usually a disaster.
Yeast is a beer’s best friend, so bottle-conditioned beers containing live yeast mature and improve, and maintain a full flavour of malt and hops. Many bottle-conditioned beers carry the logo “Camra says this is real ale” as a result of joint action between the Campaign for Real Ale and craft brewers. Alternatively, you can always visit a pub and enjoy a glass of cask beer, drawn from the cellar, where it runs no risk of being light struck, heated or oxidised.