The Plot to Destroy America's Beer
Posted: Tue Nov 27, 2012 8:16 pm
Probably not. Me either.Goober McTuber wrote:Probably won't bother Whitey in the least.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... as-beer#p1
No way a sheep-fucking bumpkin from Iowa read that article in 6 minutes.Mace wrote:Probably not. Me either.Goober McTuber wrote:Probably won't bother Whitey in the least.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... as-beer#p1
The old Anheuser-Busch insisted on using whole grains of rice in its beer. AB InBev was fine with the broken kind. “Our purchasing of rice has to do with how fresh the rice is, not whether it is whole or broken,” says Vallis.
A former top AB InBev executive, who declined to be identified because he didn’t want to get in trouble with his old employer, tells a different story. He says the company saved about $55 million a year substituting cheaper hops in Budweiser and other U.S. beers for more expensive ones like Hallertauer Mittelfrüh. It is hard to say whether the average Bud drinker has noticed.
I was on a smoke break after mounting my favorite ewe. Thirty seconds on.....6 minutes off.Goober McTuber wrote:No way a sheep-fucking bumpkin from Iowa read that article in 6 minutes.Mace wrote:Probably not. Me either.Goober McTuber wrote:Probably won't bother Whitey in the least.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... as-beer#p1
Read the first couple of pages about the Becks thing. This is not exactly news.Goober McTuber wrote:Probably won't bother Whitey in the least.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... as-beer#p1
Nolan...you're a genius.Mikey wrote:Miller did the same thing with Loewenbrau back in the 70s, when they started making it in Canada.
Yes, it was.Wolfman wrote:Loewenbrau
Was a pretty damn good beer when it was really imported from the Fatherland.
Bizzarofelice wrote:i blame the fact that they went public with the company.
AB was fat and bloated like so many of their customers. as soon as they went public this was inevitable.
i worked with AB. know it pretty well. know lots of people in the offices there then and now.Dinsdale wrote:Bizzarofelice wrote:i blame the fact that they went public with the company.
AB was fat and bloated like so many of their customers. as soon as they went public this was inevitable.
You mean in 1980?
So, now that AB is no longer publicly traded, it should be quickly improving, right?
You have earned a :facepalm:.
In 1980?Bizzarofelice wrote:i worked with AB.
KC Scott wrote:Moron.Dinsdale wrote:
So, now that AB is no longer publicly traded, it should be quickly improving, right?
You have earned a :facepalm:.
Anheuser-Busch is still a publicly traded company
I guess if we are redefining things like marriage, then why should beer be off the table? We are a nation of innovators after all.88 wrote:In Germany this might be true. But not elsewhere.PSUFAN wrote:If you use rice to make a beverage, then you can't call it beer.