Here's my top 3:
visitors can't see pics , please
register or
login1) Dogfish Head Birra Etrusca Bronze - Dogfish Head has a series of drinks based off of ancient recipes. There's others based on Egyptian and Chinese recipes thousands of years old. The Etrusca mimics the recipe of bronze age Etruscan drinks, based on chemical analysis of jars from bronze age burial sites in the area. It contains gentian and myrrh, along with other ingredients you would be hard-pressed to find in any modern brews. This was the noble drink of the Mediterranean before wine become commonplace. It is absolutely delicious, and worth the cost ($10-15 a bottle, about the price of mid-tier wines around here). Lots of unfamiliar flavors that are bitter, herb-y, and musty. Not something I would drink every day, but a great treat now and then.
visitors can't see pics , please
register or
login2) Wychwood Hobgoblin Dark English Ale - Nutty and smokey. Goes great with rich food like steak and fries. A good drink to sip slowly while you linger around the bar.
visitors can't see pics , please
register or
login3) Stone Smoked Porter - a lot of Stone's stuff is way too hoppy for me. They just go overboard and it feels like a contest to make the most intense and bitter beer possible. The smoked porter is plenty bitter, but not insanely so. It is amazing with sweet and spicy food like BBQ/Thai/Malaysian/Indonesian dishes. I don't really care for it on its own, but it complements these foods perfectly. I'd take it over a paired wine any day.
When I'm out at a random bar with friends I usually go for Shock Top or a Saranac pale ale (a local brand). Reasonably priced, and beats pisswater lager. If it's fall I will drink
all the pumpkin ales. Haven't met one I didn't like. They're also usually really cheap or the special of the day/week.