• PATRONS: Did you know we've a chat function for you now? Look to the bottom of the screen, you can chat, set up rooms, talk to each other individually or in groups! Click 'Chat' at the right side of the chat window to open the chat up.
  • Love Gotmead and want to see it grow? Then consider supporting the site and becoming a Patron! If you're logged in, click on your username to the right of the menu to see how as little as $30/year can get you access to the patron areas and the patron Facebook group and to support Gotmead!
  • We now have a Patron-exclusive Facebook group! Patrons my join at The Gotmead Patron Group. You MUST answer the questions, providing your Patron membership, when you request to join so I can verify your Patron membership. If the questions aren't answered, the request will be turned down.

"The End of History" beer

Barrel Char Wood Products

BrewinNColorado

Got Mead? Patron
GotMead Patron
Jan 4, 2008
173
2
0
Boulder County, Colorado
Ok. this is just creepy, but good enough to pass along

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38376048/ns/us_news-weird_news

by Ian Johnston
msnbc.com
updated 7/23/2010 5:33:41 AM ET


You'd expect a lot from a bottle of beer costing $765. What you get is 55 percent alcohol — and served in a squirrel.

According to Scottish firm BrewDog, "The End of History" is the "strongest, most expensive and most shocking beer in the world."

Just 12 bottles were made and the company has already sold out. They will be shipped out to buyers in the United States, Canada, Italy, Denmark, Scotland and England next week.

The dead animals which were used to create the beers' unusual appearance were four squirrels, seven weasels and a hare. All were roadkill, James Watt, co-founder of BrewDog, told msnbc.com.

The name of the blond Belgian ale is taken from the title of a book by philosopher Francis Fukuyama, "The End of History and the Last Man" which the company said had been chosen to imply "this is to beer what democracy is to history."

Watt said the beer should be treated with care when drinking.

"It tastes more like a whisky and you have got to handle it in that way as opposed to the way you would handle a normal beer," he told msnbc.com.

It contains juniper berries and nettles, and its taste, Watt said, has hints of cinnamon, orange and an "American hops flavor."

He said this was the last in a series of high-strength beers that the company had produced and there were no plans to go higher.

'Degrading' to animals
The decision to wrap the bottle in a dead animal was taken to indicate how special the beer was, blending brewing, taxidermy and "art."

"We were making such a tiny amount that we wanted to do something epic," Watt told msnbc.com. "We wanted to challenge people's perceptions about how beer can be packaged; taxidermy helps open people's eyes to the fact that beer doesn't have to be made by a multi-national organization."

However the decision was described by Ross Minett, campaigns director for the U.K. charity Advocates for Animals, as "terribly out of date" and "degrading" for the animals.

"The modern approach is to celebrate the wonders of animals and respect them as individual sentient creatures," he said, according to the U.K.'s Daily Telegraph newspaper. "I'm sure this would have much greater appeal with the animal-loving public."

Asked about animal rights concerns, Watt said: "It was all roadkill we got from a taxidermist. They are all animals that were dead anyway. We think to use dead animals in this way is much better than for them to be left to rot on the roadside."
 

Chevette Girl

All around BAD EXAMPLE
Moderator
Lifetime GotMead Patron
Apr 27, 2010
8,447
59
48
Ottawa, ON
Weird. Definitely weird. I'm glad they didn't kill critters just for this, reduce, reuse, reanimate, you know...
 

AToE

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 8, 2009
4,066
3
0
Calgary AB Canada
Weird. Definitely weird. I'm glad they didn't kill critters just for this, reduce, reuse, reanimate, you know...

Ha, fantastic! I'm stealing that.

I don't get the point to this company other than shock value, any goof can distill or fortify beer up to pretty much whatever % they want. The only high ABV I'm impressed by is when it's fermented to.
 

icedmetal

NewBee
Registered Member
Nov 16, 2009
794
1
0
Everett WA
They actually freeze-distilled the stuff, so actually only those with super super cold freezers could potentially get as high an abv as this. Your home reefer need not apply.

I've been seeing this article literally everywhere for the past two days. Facebook, msnbc, guys at work sending it to me personally, other guys at work discussing it on the beer lists, etc. Meaning, on the parts of Brewdog: job well done. More publicity than you can shake a stick at. I believe they can safely lay off the high abv beer now, having (most likely permanently) won that particular battle. Even if the other guys made stronger beer, they wouldn't wrap it in an animal, so they lose. ;D

Check out Brewdog's video blogs; sink the bismark and tactical nuclear penguin were both quite fun to watch in addition to the end of history.
 

icedmetal

NewBee
Registered Member
Nov 16, 2009
794
1
0
Everett WA
Best comment I found in the msnbc comment section:

That's pretty disgusting. You'd have to be pretty squirrely to buy this beer. I mean, what happens when you drink it and find a hare in it? I'd try to weasel out of paying for it if that happened.

LOL
 
Last edited:

Beave

NewBee
Registered Member
Apr 9, 2010
24
0
0
Spencer, IA
My fav response so far:

Pony kegs in Shetland ponies......Full kegs in a moose......12 packs in a Rotweiller.....I think we're on to something here.

And once my brews are ready, Mead in a Beaver!!
 

Gardenmead

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 8, 2009
126
1
0
Santa Rosa, California
Ok....Tactical Nuclear Penguin was one thing....but this is ridiculous! :eek:

The photo of the bottles did not seem appealing to me at all. Maybe it is just a publicity stunt, and I am sure in that sense it has worked quite well but the squirrel bottle definitely does not make me want to cough up 700 dollars!

Also, just think how hard it would be to fit the bottles into your cases, boxes, or wine racks? Not to mention your fridge.
 
Barrel Char Wood Products

Viking Brew Vessels - Authentic Drinking Horns