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149 lines
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Plaintext
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Episode: 1684
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Title: HPR1684: 5150 Shades of Beer Jacob Leinenkugels Winter Explorer Pack
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1684/hpr1684.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 07:42:19
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---
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This is HPR episode 1684 entitled 5150 Shades of Beer Jacob Linencougles Winter Explorer Pack
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and is part of the series 5150 Shades of Beer.
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It is hosted by 50 and 50 and is about 14 minutes long.
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The summary is 50 tries the Linencougles Explorer Pack.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com
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Howdy folks, this is 5150 for Hacker Public Radio.
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And thank you for joining me once again for episode 4 of 5150 Shades of Beer.
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Today I'll be reviewing from the Jacob Linencougles Brewery of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.
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They're Winner Explorer Pack and that's a 12 pack of four different types of beer.
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So three bottles of each kind.
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And the first one in my favorite is Winner's Bite.
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And the best way I can describe it.
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Do you know what it smells like when you open a tin of cocoa?
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City sweet kind, not completely unsweetened.
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And no matter how you do it, just a little of the powder puffs out.
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Well that's the best description that I can give for this beer.
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Is it just, it tastes just like that smell.
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Even down to the dryness.
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Neither clawingly sweet, or leaving you who mix the chocolate syrup into your beer,
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just the subtle taste of dry cocoa.
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This longer pours dark with very little head.
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And it only seems to be available from Linencougles in the Explorer Pack.
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So you can't just go out and buy six pack of it.
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And because of that, it's a PV and ingredients were not featured on the website,
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which is Lighty or Lenny.com.
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Unusual for brewery to abbreviate their name, but it's L-E-I-N-I-E.com.
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And that's where I've got specifics on most of the rest of the beers.
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The second one, and not to say it's bad, it just happens to be my least favorite in the group,
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is their Hells Yeah.
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And that's the play on the word Hells is German word for light.
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But in this case, unlike American beers, light only describes the color, which is the color of
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wheat straw, very clear. It has a moderate head that disappears without leaving any lacing.
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Very subtle malt taste, hint of hops, and just slightly more than a pinch of pepper.
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And 5.5% alcohol by volume.
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The malt are pale malt, and the hops are five American hops, including SIMCO and citrus.
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They're playing a little close to the vest there.
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They're not wanting to tell you what the other three hops are.
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Okay, the next one is the cranberry ginger shandy.
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And where a shandy is, it's a mix of a beer with either soft drink, carbon-lebanated ginger beer,
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ginger ale, or apple juice or orange juice. Something like that.
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It's essentially, most commonly in this country, you see it as a beer mixed with some sort of fruit juice.
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And that's what's called an adjunct.
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The juice does not take any part in the fermentation process.
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So you have your beer, it's done, you decant it, and then you make it with the juice.
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Probably in Europe, you do that yourself at home.
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But here it's marketed in a bottle.
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And it pours a clout of yellow amber.
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A moderate head that disappears without any lacing.
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And it truly is, because of course, if you add fruit to the fermentation process,
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of course, most of it is going to turn to alcohol without leaving any residual flavor of that ingredient.
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So or not much.
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So it is very hard to create a fruity sort of beer if you want your beer that way
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by mixing it into the fermentation process.
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You will get a much stronger flavor by mixing it in as a juice or a syrup or whatever afterwards.
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At least that in Google Manage resist the urge to make it red,
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unlike shock tops, cranberry, belts, and ale, which I find it's very similar.
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And I like the shock tops cranberry ale.
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But it's a little more sweet and a little more serpy, a little more in your face.
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And it doesn't say it, but I suspect it must be something akin to a shandy as well.
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In other words, you wouldn't have that much fruit flavor unless it was added after the fermentation process.
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But I will say at the linencougles shandy, sometimes you will get a micro brewery ale
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and it will say cherry flavor.
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You know, well, cherry flavor is not like soda pop.
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But it might say winter cherry ale, something like that.
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And well, you taste it and you say, well, it's a good thing it says on the bottle what that's supposed to be
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because it's so, so incredibly subtle.
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Well, I would be able to tell you there's fruit flavor in there.
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I wouldn't be able to tell you what it was.
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So definitely linencougles cranberry ginger shandy, definitely you can tell that it tastes of
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cranberries, but it's just not quite so strong as a shock tops.
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And you can also clearly taste the ginger.
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I like to do a lot of Asian cook, well, I wouldn't say a lot.
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But some of my favorite recipes are Asian ones that include ginger.
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So I'm familiar with the taste as opposed of ginger as opposed to say refined sugars.
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But definitely, it's got a definite taste of ginger in there.
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So it's sort of an aftertaste, the cranberry is going to hit your tongue first.
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And as you swallow, then you're going to get the ginger taste.
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As you might expect compared to the other beers, it's only 4.2% alcohol per volume.
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And the reason for that is, of course, it started out as a stronger beer,
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and then you're adding fruit juice to it.
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So of course, unless you start out from a very, very strong beer,
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you're going to come out with something fairly light on the alcohol content.
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The multiple in wheat, the hops are cluster.
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And it says other natural cranberry and ginger flavors, as one might expect.
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Lastly, in the pack, we have the snow drift for Noah Porter.
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And that poor is a dark brown with just a little caramel color head.
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And it just disappears just a little bit ahead to get it disappears immediately.
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And not leaving any lacing, which lacing is like the little lattice pattern,
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even after the foam's gone, where it leaves the lattice pattern around the outer edge of the glass,
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that's what it's called lacing.
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Usually, if you don't get any foam or if the foam dissipates very quickly,
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like in this beer, it's an indication of a higher alcohol volume.
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The higher the alcohol will, the less head that you get, and the faster it just evaporates.
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The vanilla port has the highest alcohol per volume at 6.0.
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You know, as bears go, that's not something you're going to drink a beer and fall down.
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But that's something you might want to be aware of, if you expect to have three or four or five
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of these in an evening, that's a little more alcohol content than probably a bud or a cooler or
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something, not that much higher. Maltz, two and six row pale malt, carnal 60, carapels, special B,
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dark chocolate, and roasted barley hops. You can also find the flavor of the roasted
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malt in there along with the vanilla. The dark chocolate, you can kind of taste that,
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I think, keeps it for being, makes it a little less sweet than some other vanilla portals.
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The hops are cluster and will emit, and then, of course, for other ingredients, it says,
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real vanilla. Okay, now, let's get into the bonus round, because I have one more
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Lenincugal offering that was not in the winter explorer pack, so I had to explore for this one
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on myself. Well, in here this, you might want to go looking for, because right now, it seems to be
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on sale everywhere. I don't know if it still will be. When you hear this in three or four weeks,
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but very well might be, or there might be another Lenincugal six pack, because this is really it.
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I think it's six bucks here. That puts it down like a six pack of bud, but it's,
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was Lenincugal's orange shandy. It's a wheat beer or a wise beer. Most likely exactly the same one
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that's in the cranberry ginger shandy, because it's got the same ingredients. Maltz, pale and wheat,
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and then hops are cluster, and other natural orange flavor. Remember, I said common things for
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the shandy are either lemonade or straight orange juice, and this was not quite as sweet.
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Well, I said it's, it's pretty sweet. It's tartness sweet. Of course, it's orange juice
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expected to be, but then quite cover up the flavor of the beer, like the cranberry ginger shandy,
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the juice pretty much predominates. But you can tell you're drinking a wheat beer, probably on a
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hot day. If I was outside hot working, and I wanted something that was going to quench my first,
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I'd probably grab the orange shandy first. And just like the cranberry shandy, it's 4.2 percent.
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Alcohol per volume. I've always liked linen cougles. I think the brand bears the most
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direct comparison is shock top, and that used to be an independent brand when I started with. And
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of course, it was bought by Budweiser, and I don't know if that makes any difference in their
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management decisions. Between the two, I would say linen cougles is probably higher quality beer.
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But if you want a really fruity beer, then shock top does put in somewhat stronger
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flavoring than they put in the linen cougles. So my best idea is for direct comparisons.
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To get the if a fruity type beer is something that you fruit flavored beer is something that
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you'd be interested in. Grab a six pack of both the linen cougles and the shock top and compare
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them, because they're both those are among my favorites, so see which one you like best.
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Okay, well this has been 5150 for Hacker Public Radio once again. Hopefully there will be
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somebody here tomorrow with a more technical discussion. It's something to educate you a little more
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than today's, but until the next time have a happy life.
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