Wine's brief moment of glory in the
sunshine of the Gallup Poll is done. After
inexplicably tying beer last year as America's drink
of choice and exciting the napkin-waving emotions of
newspaper food editors across the nation, wine has
slipped back into its proper subservient place.
In the annual Gallup booze poll for 2006, beer
reigns supreme once again! The first choice of 41
percent of Americans – and continues to be the
biggest seller in volume and dollar sales,
accounting for almost 60 percent of all booze sales.
In celebration, a list of reasons why beer is better
than wine.
ONE
If you drink beer from the bottle instead of pouring
it into a glass first, you’re just a guy. If you’re
necking a bottle of wine – doesn’t matter how
expensive it is, doesn’t matter how "exquisite" it
is – you’re a drunk. Why do you think they call them
“winos”?
TWO
Beer’s cheaper. Don’t tell me that’s not a good
reason. You can’t pay much more than $25 for a
single bottle of beer, maybe $40 in a good
restaurant, and that’s going to be a big bottle of
some rare Belgian specialty that’s so good your toes
will curl. You can easily get two glasses of
exceptional beer for under $15 anywhere. A $40
bottle of wine in a restaurant? At best it’s
drinkable, but it will probably peel the paint off
the walls when the waiter unscrews the cap. Wine is
so stupid pricey it can even cost you your job.
THREE
Germans make beer; the French make wine.
FOUR
People know beer’s good without having to be
convinced of it by some snot with a wine column.
Easy to figure this one out: What do more people
start on, beer or wine? Beer tastes like bread and
spices and snappy citrus zest and a hundred other
things, depending on how it’s made. Wine? On first
taste, good wine tastes like fruit gone bad. You
need someone to explain to you what it is about wine
that’s actually pretty good. Because it is, I’ll
admit it, but it took me a while of wanting to like
it before I did.
FIVE
Beer makes you sing AC/DC. Wine makes you sing
opera.
SIX
Beer comes in smaller bottles; opening one is an
easier decision. That seems like a trivial thing,
but wine marketers are pushing smaller bottles
lately. Smaller bottles cost less and there’s not as
much in them, so people will make the decision to
buy wine more easily. Beer’s already there. And
we’ve got the whole draft thing, too. Point to beer.
SEVEN
Five percent of wine corks are undetectably bad and
turn the wine in the bottle to crap. That’s why the
waiter will give you the cork to sniff – or he did
until too many ignorant people made fun of the
practice. But that’s not the real reason that makes
beer better than wine. That’s because even if a
bottle of wine is corked, most people will drink it
anyway, because they know wine’s not supposed to
taste "good." Beer doesn’t usually go bad, but when
it does, it turns skunky or sour or has floaters.
This is nature’s way of letting you know that the
beer is not good. Thanks, nature!
EIGHT
Wine drinkers always go on about vintages and great
years and wines of the past. Hey, too bad for them.
Vintages run out; the brewer can almost always make
more beer that’s just as good as the one you loved.
NINE
Beer goes better with barbecue. And Thai. And ham.
And cheese. And salads. And sausage. And bread. And
crabs. And tomatoes. And waffles. And so on. In
fact, if you read most wine books, there are a lot
of foods an honest wine writer will admit just don't
go well with any kind of wine. You can always tell
when beer goes better with a food than wine does,
because there’s an easy test. Ask a wine expert what
wine goes best with the food. If they say “Riesling”
or “Gewitrztraminer, ” beer tastes better than wine
with that dish.
TEN
Beer is a much more direct drink: When a brewer
wants beer to taste like fruit … he adds fruit. If
he wants it to taste like smoke, he smokes some malt
– with real smoke – and he adds that. Wine makers
get different flavors by adding suggestions,
imagination and hints: “You’ll taste smoke and
hints of fresh herbs, with a flinty, mineral back
splash of firmness.” And if you don’t, goes the
unspoken subtext, you’re stupid. Surprise, surprise
– everyone says, “Yeah, I can really taste the
herbs! Fresh herbs, wow! ”


