Molson Canadian

Granville Island Brewery Honey Lager, is an excellent full bodied beer. I just came back from a keg party in Vancouver, and that what we had… awsomeness for keg beer… I can only imagine what the bottled stuff tastes like, trying soon.

I love my PWB 360. The Kokanee rip-off.

[quote=“Trotsky”]Beer is great, namely shaftsbury and sleemans and keiths in my mind, but it is a crying shame that molson canadian isn’t actually canadian anymore. Sure it is worked by canadian workers, but company is american. It would be like saying that Nike shoes are actually zimbabwain or philipino because a bunch of 3rd world sweat shop kiddies put them together, but that isn’t quite the case is it? That’s why i stick to buying ALL Canadian beers like the ones i listed up top.

I vote we start an uprising and take canadian back - if for nothing else, just so we can still see and hear the phrase ‘i am canadian’ and not have it be just a gimick to sell the beer. The yanks are making money off of marketing the saying ‘i am canadian’. and it’s a flippin lie!

Miatch Windu[/quote]

Ahh, Coors is aight though.

Especially Coor’s Coor’s… it’s very easy to drink, like Coor’s Light, and you don’t feel like a wimp drinking it!

And hey, didn’t Coor’s develop the contemporary aluminum can, and, in order to encourage widespread recycling, released it to the public domain rather than patent it?

More like for avoiding liablity from popped tires along the highway.

Wally: Hey Dilbert, what do you call it when a guy goes from middle management to upper management?
Dilbert: …
Wally: A promotion!
Dilbert: …
Wally: Here’s a memo.

Hot and cold running beer…

A woman thought she was in heaven when beer instead of water flowed from the taps in her apartment in west Norway.

“I turned on the tap to clean some knives and forks and beer came out,” Haldis Gundersen told Reuters from her home in Kristiansund, west Norway. “We thought we were in heaven.”

Beer in Norway is among the most expensive in the world with a 0.4 liter (0.7 pint) costing about 50 crowns ($7.48) in a bar.

Gundersen said she tried the beer but that it tasted a bit odd and was not fizzy.

It turned out that a worker in a bar two floors below had mixed up the pipes on Saturday evening, wrongly connecting a new barrel to a water pipe leading to Gundersen’s flat. The bar got water in its beer taps.

Does anyone know why it’s legal to wear a toque while riding a motorcycle in Norway?

Well, when it came time to decide what the safest form of head protection was, the Norwegans climbed to the top of Oksskolten to conduct an impact safety test. From there, they threw off a bicycle helmet, a motorcycle helmet, a hockey helmet and a toque.

When they got to the bottom they saw that the toque was the only thing that didn’t break, thus concluding it to be the safest form of head protection.

[quote=“Trotsky”]Beer is great, namely shaftsbury and sleemans and keiths in my mind, but it is a crying shame that molson canadian isn’t actually canadian anymore … That’s why i stick to buying ALL Canadian beers like the ones i listed up top.
[/quote]

Not to knock you off your high horse, but by your logic Keith’s isn’t Canadian either. Keith’s is owned by Labatt’s, and Labatt’s is owned by InterBrew. InterBrew is a company from Belgium.

For that matter, neither is Kokanee. It’s also an InterBrew label I believe.