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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
- Dissecting The Beer Menu – An Irish Pub & Layered Brews
- Has anyone else noticed that every “limited release” somehow stays on shelves for months?
- Dissecting The Beer Menu – An Irish Pub & Layered Brews
- Headed to Asheville – looking for top breweries to get German style in cans / bottles
- Does anyone else feel guilty drinking beer alone because it’s supposed to be a social experience?
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The Illusion of Limited Releases: Are They Really That Limited?
Have you ever wandered into your local bottle shop only to find “limited edition” beers lingering on the shelves for weeks or even months? This phenomenon seems to be becoming increasingly common, and it raises an important question: Are these so-called limited releases truly as exclusive as they claim to be?
Just yesterday, I strolled into my favorite bottle shop and was greeted by an “extremely limited” barrel-aged stout that has been collecting dust since October. The sign heralding its rarity still boasted of a mere 500 cases produced, yet it appears no one is eager to fork over $25 for a brew that tastes remarkably similar to countless others in the bourbon barrel stout category.
In years past, beers like Kentucky Breakfast Stout (KBS) and Bourbon County Brand Stout (BCBS) were highly sought after; enthusiasts would camp outside retailers to secure their coveted bottles. Fast forward to today, and I can easily grab vintage 2020 BCBS off the shelves of any decent beer shop, as if it were just another case of a mass-produced lager.
The reality is that breweries are now churning out so many “limited” offerings that an alarming amount ends up sitting on the shelf long after the recommended “drink by” date. This raises a critical issue: the marketing of artificial scarcity has reached a point where it feels more disingenuous than enticing.
As a devoted beer lover, I am growing weary of shelling out premium prices for so-called “limited edition” brews that are less rare than a popular, widely available beer. If a beer is truly meant to be exclusive, it should be genuinely elusive; otherwise, it’s time to stop pretending that every contact-brewed, barrel-aged concoction is a hidden gem waiting to be discovered.
In a world filled with superfluous releases, let’s encourage transparency and authenticity in the craft beer community. After all, the joy of beer lies in its unique flavors, not in an overhyped scarcity.