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Steven Coulson
Steven has been drinking beers, wines and spirits for decades and has a propensity to go about them at length after a few drinks.
Latest Posts
- 57/m: Love beer, but it doesn’t love me as much anymore
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- Does anyone else get treated like a beer snob for ordering literally anything that isn’t a macro lager?
- Is there a polite way to refuse a beer that’s being served in the wrong glassware without making everyone at the table uncomfortable?
- # What’s the most pretentious thing you’ve ever said about beer that you secretly didn’t understand yourself?
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The Art of Pretentious Beer Talk: Have You Ever Bluffed Your Way Through a Tasting?
Craft beer enthusiasts often find themselves navigating a minefield of terminology that can sometimes feel more intimidating than enlightening. Take, for instance, a recent bottle share I attended, where the clinking of bottles and the chatter of aficionados filled the air. As one particularly exquisite barrel-aged sour was poured, I suddenly felt the urge to sound knowledgeable and sophisticated.
“Ah, I truly appreciate the way the brett interacts with the oak tannins to produce some exquisite phenolic compounds,” I declared confidently. The only issue? My grasp on phenolic compounds was tenuous at best. I suspect I merely mashed together some wine jargon with snippets of brewing insights I’d picked up from a podcast—details that, in the moment, felt crucial to convey how impressed I was.
What followed was even more amusing. As the words left my mouth, I noticed everyone nodding in agreement, as if I had just shared a profound truth about beer. Emboldened by their reactions, I added a statement about the beer’s ability to “express local terroir through indigenous microflora.” In retrospect, it sounds like pure gibberish.
Just last month, I found myself waxing poetic about the “mouthfeel complexity” of another beer when, in reality, I was merely trying to articulate its thickness. It’s remarkable how easily we can slip into the habit of using extravagant language, even when we might not fully understand it ourselves. If you’re anything like me, you might sometimes feel like you’re simply engaging in a craft beer version of Mad Libs—filling in the blanks with buzzwords and phrases we’ve heard in conversations, all while hoping no one calls our bluff.
Ultimately, it raises the question: Are we all just echoing what we’ve heard, hoping that our companions share the same gaps in knowledge? If you’ve ever felt the pressure to sound knowledgeable about beer but found yourself lost in a sea of jargon, you’re certainly not alone. Let’s embrace our love for craft beer, even if it sometimes leads us to the edge of pretentiousness. Cheers to honesty in enjoyment!