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Thread: Blueberry Beer

  1. #1

    Default Blueberry Beer

    Hi All -

    Up in the U.P. I have no problem finding locally brewed blueberry beers using Michigan berries. The beers are poured with fresh blueberries floating in it.

    In Marquette I could buy take-home growlers for $2 that were real tasty.

    Anyone know where I can get this in south east michigan?

  2. #2

    Default

    $2 growlers? Fantastic!

    If anyone knows of any $2 growlers, blueberry-flavored or not, let me know.

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by devman1983 View Post
    Hi All -

    Up in the U.P. I have no problem finding locally brewed blueberry beers using Michigan berries. The beers are poured with fresh blueberries floating in it.

    In Marquette I could buy take-home growlers for $2 that were real tasty.

    Anyone know where I can get this in south east michigan?
    Arcadia Roggen Berry


    Kuhnhenn Brewing Co. has one too.





    I think Foran's will sell you a growler of anything they have on tap, But I haven't tried to make a purchase yet.
    Last edited by leland_palmer; November-08-09 at 11:05 PM.

  4. #4

    Default

    Kind of late in the year for Blueberry Beer. I know In July/August you have a better chance of finding some. Cherry beer is much more common.

  5. #5

    Default

    Yeah I know it's a bit late for blueberry beer. The thing is, we were up north in July and it was too early for it. Now it's November and it's too late.

  6. #6

    Default

    Blueberries are delicious.
    Beer is delicious.

    Never the 'twain shall meet......

  7. #7

    Default

    Never the twain shall meet

    Meaning
    Two things which are so different as to have no opportunity to unite.

    Origin
    Twain derives from the Old English twegen, meaning two. The phrase never the twain shall meet was used by Rudyard Kipling, in his Barrack-room ballads, 1892:
    "Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet."
    There, Kipling is lamenting the gulf of understanding between the British and the inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent. It may well be that he coined the phrase - at least, I can't find an earlier citation of it in print.

    Source: http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/255800.html

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