5.31.2011

Knuttelbrau sees the lager picture

See what I did there?  Eh?

Anyways, yes, I have brewed my first lager.  It is dubbed "Dr. Knuttel's Lycanthropic Lager" (though I am neither a Doctor or a Lycanthrope).

Lagers, unfairly, have gotten a bad rap due to the saturation of the market (especially in the America) of the so-called Macro-lager -- a lighter take on the pilsner beers of Bohemia and, to a lesser extent, southern Germany.  America has its Budweiser, its Miller, its Coors -- and chances are wherever you are in the country, it would not be difficult to find at least two of the three, if not all of them.  Elsewhere there are still Molsons, Labatts, Heinekens, Stella Artoises, Mooseheads, Amstels -- but they're all pretty much variants on this macro-lager style.

5.16.2011

Lady Gaga, as she were, May 2011

Anyone who knows me and my tastes in music knows that amongst the vast sea to which I listen, waves crashing upon the shore, Lady Gaga is certainly a larger wave.  More to the point, anyone who has read these two past articles (seeing as how the older one, a review of The Fame, is from 2009, I'm clearly digging).

Hah, remember when I used to open all of my posts with quotes from old plays and literature.  Those were the days, or I think it only lasted like a month or two, whatevs, it was a fun time.  It was just getting too forced and, well, difficult to keep finding apt quotes for whatever I was writing.  The Gaga one, however, was hella apt.

5.04.2011

Symptom of the Brew-niverse and other beer-ings

I bottled my saison earlier today (Saisons dans l'abime).

My previous dealings with gushers were caused by one of two things -- too much priming sugar or not enough sanitation.

I decided to focus on the sanitation issue.  I made sure everything was cleaned twice, and I also sanitized my previously untouched bottle caps (I guess I thought they were too small to make a difference).

5.02.2011

Osama Bin Laden...

So, as most of America (and probably the world) knows, Osama Bin Laden was killed last night during an attack on his compound.  A tip was given on his whereabouts last fall, following up on this, the attack order was given.  So I thought I'd give a few thoughts on the matter.

-- The reactions for this happening were varied, sure, but moreso than I thought they would be.  Elation was common, and not entirely uncalled for -- finding him has been an endeavor that has been going on full time for just under 10 years, and at least part time since the other WTC bombing in 1994.  So yeah, this has been going on for three administrations, not two.  Obama may (and rightfully so) get the credit for ending this, but it has taken a long concerted effort from three Presidential administrations and a whole score of people in the intelligence field.

-- Seeing such elation from the death of one man is still kind of strange to me though.  I guess I was just expecting something a little more along the lines of relief.  That being said, with the exception of the more uncouth elated remarks, I was more disconcerted by the ultra-pacifist anger of, well, killing him.  Misdirected anger definitely could be done away with, but I guess I just have an understanding of the world as a violent place, in pretty much any capacity.  Competition happens whether you want it to or not, and getting rid of someone who has actively gunned for the eradication of the western world (ironically since being supported by them to get rid of the soviets) would definitely fall under much more of a plus than a minus.

-- I wonder how much planning and plotting he has been able to get done while being on the run from so many different people.  I also wonder if he has been able to groom a successor in the 10 years since 9/11.

-- I find it kind of funny that he was found in a compound in a relatively affluent suburb of Islamabad when we've been given this image of him cave hopping across Waziristan.

-- I like how they gave him a proper Muslim burial (within 24 hours, no cremation), and doing it at sea was smart to prevent his grave from becoming some sort of shrine to his cause.  Not having any pictures of the event prevents an outrage from happening regarding this, but similarly it makes me feel like I am kind of taking this news for granted.

-- For anyone who cares, the mission was apparently to apprehend Bin Laden, preferably alive, though dead would also be acceptable.  More than being in custody, he personally needed to be stopped.  Capturing him and putting him under trial/in prison would have been a nice touch but apparently it was unfeasible.

-- I'm bemused by anyone who tries to attribute/divide credit among the administrations.  Clearly Bush had been doing this longer than Obama, but the end was in Obama's administration, so really he is the only one who can get any hard credit (both the operation and the intelligence tip to his whereabouts).  To try and figure out how much work was actually done under each administration would be long, pointless, and petty.  The deed is done, leave it at that.

-- I haven't heard anything about how the Muslim world has reacted to this.  Arguably he has killed more Muslims than Westerners, but those who align with him identify themselves as Muslim.

-- So there have been a lot of goings on in the Muslim world, period, these past few months.  From a western standpoint, this may be the apogee of these events, but hopefully this doesn't stop.  The civil war is still raging in Libya, and there are still rumblings in Syria.

-- Knuttel