Why, does yours drink all your beer and never replenish? My dad was something of a semi-successful song writer, just a few plays on radio, no huge residuals, and he wrote a country love song to my mom titled "She Dont Drink My Beer" and it was about how he loved her partially because she never drank any of his beer, the joke being she preferred whiskey and coke. A band actually recorded it, but it never got picked up for radio play or put on an album. He loved playing the f out of the copy he had, he played it for everyone, though I'm not sure exactly how much my mom appreciated the subject matter.😂
@@menghao737 u been waiting to tell people your dad was a songwriter your whole life waiting for a moment like this so you could type all that jus for 3 likes…(no hate tho i think it’s cool and i’d love to know your dads name so i can hear the song)
Haha oh god I work at a drive thru and the way you described an aluminum bottle as a bottle shape aluminum can triggered me lol. Because we had a customer that wanted a "12 pack of tall cans". She got asked if she meant tall cans or aluminum bottles. She said "the tall cans!" So the other guy got them for her. Then she went on her merry way. Comes back 5 minutes later complaining that we gave her the wrong ones and she wanted the tall slim cans that look like bottles. So basically she was incapable of understanding a bottle can be made from other things than glass and aluminum doesnt automatically equally can lol
In Australia (and we love our beer here) we mostly go with cans because they have a better taste. Maybe it's because our weather is different, but you'd be hard pressed to find a craft brewery that uses bottles
It's because cans have a plastic film liner. Glass is completely inert. Liquor store bro is correct about the color though. The less light a bottle let's in the less the flavor is affected but the glass bottle itself does not affect flavor profile.
What he didnt mention is that the cans are lined with a thin layer of plastic and the beer diffuses into it and the plastic may affect flavor over time. There's a big tradeoff there.
Indeed, I was about to post this exact same comment. This is also the reason soda tastes better when it’s bottled vs canned. Seriously. Buy a bottle of coke and a can of coke, one will taste better than the other. Light will degrade the freshness of beer, but so will plastic. And plastic will do more to you than just taste bad.
Green and brown and red bottles are the best for freshness. Idk why a beer company would use a blue bottle but its not like you’re storing ur beers in any sort of light anyway so that just leaves oxygen. The surface area of a can seal is way greater than that of a bottle seal and thats just one. Bottles are inert while nothing about a can is.
Also remember the darker colored glass bottles (like the dark brown bottles) block the most light. Mid tier would be green bottles, but that hardly blocks any light compared to brown. Clear bottles, like Corona, let all the light through
@@FeIonKeller it's by favorite beer, but definitely needs the lime. I keep a bottle of "Real Lime" with my Corona and give it a squeeze when I open one. Corona and Guinness are the only beers I've found that actually taste good but Corona needs the lime
@@StonyCephalopod I'm saying cans are better cause the light can't penetrate. I was just being sarcastic but English is my second language so it didn't really translate well😂
Taste is subjective, but I will firmly standby the fact that beer in a bottle is better than one from a can. That being said I don't really drink beer much and mainly use it for cooking, lol.
I stopped drinking old English 40s when they stopped selling it in a glass bottle. The plastic just makes it taste way worse. A glass old e 40 and some blunts use to be my go to. Sober now, but ya that shit was great together. Liquid gold!
@@pelletrouge3032 Beer is used in batters. It’s also used for some dipping sauces. A lot of folks use beer when searing meat. there’s lots of things you can do in the kitchen with beer.
bottles are in a case so i don't find much light hits the bottles anyways. its more the taste of the can on your tongue than the taste of the beer, it does give you a metallic taste so you better pour it into a glass.
Heineken bottles are intentionally green since the light that can get through them stimulates the production of certain flavor molecules responsible for the signature "skunky" taste of bottled Heineken. They could easily use brown bottles but it's a taste choice.
There's a name for that flavor change when beer is bottled in light colored bottles. Like Heineken and Corona. It's called skunking because the light going thru the bottles effects the hop flavors in the beer making them skunky
@@joemoney7640 Same here, we used to put our Heineken in grow room so it would become skunky or if buying on road we'd get the ones everyone always moved to get to the back.
the plastic lining in the can does change the flavor. you ever notice that ketchup taste completely different depending on the container it was in. similar phenomenon. theres actually a documented medical phenomenon similar where people who are injected with prepackaged saline solution taste a metallic flavor in the back of their mouth. i guess micro plastics just taste kinda metallic.
@theicechinchilla and bottles hold nice water, while cans hold corrosive fizzy alcohol or gummy bear juice aka soda, I'm drinking soda as I write this
At least here in Canada the canned version of "imports" is a local licensed clone not imported at all. There are a couple cases where the inverse is also true like Guiness and Sapporo. City
I believe the bottles taste better due to the absence of the plastic lining in the aluminum cans. Some taste worse than others depending on shipping constraints. hot cans leak plastic into the beverage
@@alexanderleach2424 yea,if I know a plastic water bottle or beer or whatever a Has gotten hot and cooled down I’ll pour the top out before I drink any cuz I noticed when (albeit these water bottle had prolly got over a hundred degrees and cooled down over 39 times) I drank water out of a water bottle it had a weird plasticy texture and when I spit it out I could see a layer of plastic at the top😮😮😮😂😂 gross af,fuck micro plastics😂😂😂
If you're in Australia and you're drinking import beer, corona, Heineken, Stella, or most large scale brand imports, then the beers are made here and the reason they vary in taste is because of the water being used. The yeast strain is proprietary so that can be moved globally but water is the thing that changes the flavor and this is the same for beer made from Tasmania or mainland Australia. The water change means a change of flavor which is why some people perceive the flavor as being different from a keg and from a bottle or can, because it's not the same thing( technically) Additionally in Australia, wild turky and cola is canned over here because it's logistically ridiculous to ship cans overseas when we can just import a large format container of white label bourbon from the wild Turkey Distillery. The cola isn't coke either, it's just white label cola. That's why a wild Turkey and cola tastes different built in a glass than from a can, it's just two different things.
My grandfather worked high up in Heineken and he always said the worst thing they did where the green bottles. They actually had a pact with other Dutch beer companies to use the same brown bottle but they eventually broke that pact.
There is BPA lined in cans. Bottles don’t have that, and BPA is actually known to raise high blood pressure. So if you’re a big beer drinker and have high blood pressure but don’t want to change how much beer you drink, try switching to bottles only(including soda and such) and see where your blood pressure goes.
Yup, dad always got all his drinks (waters and sodas) in a glass bottle, though didn't care much to do it for alcoholic beverages. And damn was he right, borjomi (mineral water) from a glass bottle tastes so much fresher.
@@NoseCandyKermit it's rare, they also took that water off sale because of this dumbass war and because it's a "russian product". Was a good mineral water and a great hangover cure.
@@arichiquabtd8092 That's unfortunate. For hangovers I'd recommend Liquid IV drink mix. It's sold at Walmart. Just pour it in a water bottle and take some excedrin migraine before bed. Works nicely.
The material of the container changes the taste. Glass leaves less trace in the drink than aluminum, with plastic bottles being the worst at it, adding chemicals to the drink.
Also worth noting that aluminum cans generally have an internal plastic coating that will, over time, leech chemicals into the beverage. It's not enough to make the beverage unsafe (as long as you consume it before the expiration date), but it is certainly enough to have a subtle impact on the taste
I think it’s the flow. The nice slick bottle neck and mouth deliver a nostalgic and familiar feel. While a can has a strange and changing shape. Not to mention there are tastebuds on your lips. You can taste the aluminum when you drink for that reason
The perceived coldness of the container also has a surprising effect on the “taste” of the beer. Aluminum feels cooler on the mouth and it changes the experience of drinking.
The glass bottle is a neutral container, the aluminum can is a reactive container even with the internal plastic lining which is also somewhat reactive to the acids in the beer. So while a bottle may let more light in, it doesn't directly alter the brew. So just store your bottle where there isn't light.
This guy isn’t an actor, but he’s logical and a natural teacher. He should be in these videos with his own ideas for interesting topics. The other skinny guy is perfect in skits, this guy would be great in just intellectual videos.
Actually cans have a thin lining of plastic on the inside to keep the aluminum from decaying by the acidic property’s of the beverage. Because of this the glass bottles are definitely healthier
The amount of beers you would have to drink for the cans to be "unhealthy" would be WAY outweighed by how unhealthy the beer is. If you drink it before the suggested date, the plastic will have zero effect on how "healthy" the beer is
@@yooowhatupribs not true and not my point. look up how much plastic we actually comsume and youll be shocked it has very real health affects over generations
Glass is better hands down... When you sip a beer the material you touch your lips to effects the taste. When you get a beer from a bar or a restaurant, it always comes in a glass, not some aluminum cup... There is a good reason for this, it tastes better in every way. *Hot tip* for the best beer drinking experience, use a paper towel to clean the surface area where the metal cap was attached to the glass bottle. This removes the metallic taste from first sip to last. It's a subtle and small difference, but definitely noticeable.
I experience metal flavor only when drinking from a bottle. That metal cap leaves a strong rust or metal flavor. Never from a can though. Cans are in fact better.
@@danu1807 did you not read what I wrote? Use a paper towel and remove the rust taste from the bottle. Problem solved, and if you do it, bottle is better. Give it a try, here, I'll wait...
For the people who prefer bottles it's probably because glass is an insulator and aluminum is a conductor so glass isn't going to get as warm as quickly if you nurse your beer.
Most of the taste difference is people drinking straight from the can. Pour em out into a glass and they will taste the same if they are both fresh. Or they are just really used that distinct skunk aroma of Heineken in a green bottle.
Actually Heineken uses green bottles because in Holland they set the bottles in the window seal for 24-48 hours before drinking so that it will get skunked so their is a reason the glass is lighter
This really is a Heineken-specific phenomenon, though - here in the UK at least it tastes FAR better keg/bottle than can, at any size and temperature. I think it might be because they're manufactured in different places
Yeah, also if you pour the can and the bottle into any regular cup ain’t no one able to accurately and consistently tell the difference. The change you “taste” is from smelling the can as your drink it, which in turn throws you off and makes you believe it’s different.
Guy I used to work with said more bacteria grows on metal than on glass. He also said brown bottles were the best type because of light as well as bacteria growing less on glass.
Also if enough time passes glass is the only one where tiny particles from the container don’t leak into the beverage but I would say that your reason is more noticeable
I like drinking basically everything out of glass just because you don't get any other flavor added on. When drinking from a can you get that metallic taste when your tongue or lips hit the can. The drink flavor doesn't change it's just when your taste buds are in contact with the can.
The problem with a can is they have a plastic liner which absorbs flavor from the beer. Giving you more water and less of everything else. Also bottles don’t allow much light in and light doesn’t affect beer very quickly so as long as you hurry a bottle is better in every single way
Essential oils are kept in dark glass bottles such as brown, blue or green to keep the light out...and I'm also certain there is a plastic lining inside the aluminum cans. Glass bottles are superior.
The main reason Heineken uses green bottles over brown bottles is marketing. When you buy a crate in the Netherlands it's the only brand tbat comes with a piece of cardboard on top, which is meant to keep the light out. A big enemy of beer in cans is the just broken aluminium edge where you opened the can, this reacts with the beer when you drink it and changes the taste. This can easily be solved though by pouring it in a glass
Beer in the can can also leech a metal taste from the aluminum and the plastic liner insider can also leech into the taste making it worse. Bottles on the other hand don't have a leeching problem which usually preserves the taste
im convinced the glass bottle itself regardless of color adds to the taste also for example if you take a coke or a beer pour one into a glass or cup or whatever and drink the other straight from the bottle it just tastes different i think its to do with getting that slower sipping like pour into your mouth instead of a flooding gulp from a glass or maybe its that you can seal around a bottle limiting air from your taste buds idk just bottles in general taste better
There was a scientific experiment that documents what we eat with and drink out of effects the perceived taste we have. The material, the shape of what we use to eat/drink out of and color all effect how we taste as well
Beer bottles are designed in a very specific way. They are designed (just like the glasses) for their kind of beer. So yes bottles taste better and are better.
Aside from light and oxygen, the material of the vessel you put to your lips has a huge impact on the flavor. Cans will impart an unpleasant metallic taste while glass is fairly tasteless. So the best thing is to pour the fresher beer from a can or keg into a glass to drink.
You maybe right about bottles having there down side but still taste better then the can do to the air an carbonation that stays in a bottle longer. Also glass is more easily recycled or reused over aluminum cans with plastic coating.
Beer's third enemy is temperature. Keeping beer cold prevents it from changing, including for the "better' (subjective). That's why cellaring is around 52-55F.
In my country quite a lot of beers is different from bottle, because they usually make the bottled beer in the original country, while the can is peoduced locally. Even tho they uae the same recepy, they can taste diffferent because of the taste of the water in the given country.
The thing about cans is they are lined with plastic, so if theyre going to be sitting for any amount of time there is a concern on that front. However the beer would likely be skunked by the time the plastic makes an impact on the taste
I've noticed that Blue Moon tastes MUCH better out of a bottle. I wonder how much the shape plays a role in it. Kind of like how there's different beer glasses.
It’s nice because he’s right. The plant hop that’s in beer goes bad and smells bad when there is more light that’s the reason that beer most of the times in in dark bottles to keep out the light. Also temprature affects this plant and oxygen just makes it more old
Beer has three enemies; light, oxygen and the wife
Why, does yours drink all your beer and never replenish? My dad was something of a semi-successful song writer, just a few plays on radio, no huge residuals, and he wrote a country love song to my mom titled "She Dont Drink My Beer" and it was about how he loved her partially because she never drank any of his beer, the joke being she preferred whiskey and coke. A band actually recorded it, but it never got picked up for radio play or put on an album. He loved playing the f out of the copy he had, he played it for everyone, though I'm not sure exactly how much my mom appreciated the subject matter.😂
@@menghao737 nah probably limits his consumption to 2 drinks at night 😂
@@menghao737 u been waiting to tell people your dad was a songwriter your whole life waiting for a moment like this so you could type all that jus for 3 likes…(no hate tho i think it’s cool and i’d love to know your dads name so i can hear the song)
@@tyisyodaddy 5 likes bro no need to be condescending
@@nollie_ollie8358 I would get divorced
This is funny. My dad says Budweiser select is better in the bottle, but it’s just a bottle shaped aluminum can. Good info 😂👍
The aluminum bottles definitely taste different . It tastes like draft beer . It's richer and more flavorful .
Haha oh god I work at a drive thru and the way you described an aluminum bottle as a bottle shape aluminum can triggered me lol. Because we had a customer that wanted a "12 pack of tall cans". She got asked if she meant tall cans or aluminum bottles. She said "the tall cans!" So the other guy got them for her. Then she went on her merry way. Comes back 5 minutes later complaining that we gave her the wrong ones and she wanted the tall slim cans that look like bottles. So basically she was incapable of understanding a bottle can be made from other things than glass and aluminum doesnt automatically equally can lol
@@aspaceproductions that’s hilarious 😂 I honestly thought it was a bottle shaped can, now I know it’s an aluminum bottle lol
@@Mharve The allinuminum bottles taste like allinunimum to me
Bud is typical American beer tasteless piss water, stick to making hot dogs, leave beer to the Europeans. Cheers
I'm with the customer here. Even with soda, no matter what it is, the glass bottle tastes purer.
In Australia (and we love our beer here) we mostly go with cans because they have a better taste. Maybe it's because our weather is different, but you'd be hard pressed to find a craft brewery that uses bottles
@@SuperNuclearUnicorn Really, I'm also from Australia and to be honest, I see bottles everywhere and not cans. Do you think it depends on the area?
Real. But cans still taste good, the worst is plastic bottles for soda
It's because cans have a plastic film liner. Glass is completely inert. Liquor store bro is correct about the color though. The less light a bottle let's in the less the flavor is affected but the glass bottle itself does not affect flavor profile.
It’s because they are made different
What he didnt mention is that the cans are lined with a thin layer of plastic and the beer diffuses into it and the plastic may affect flavor over time. There's a big tradeoff there.
Yeah I’ve always liked the bottle way better.
You’d prefer the metallic taste?
Yeah, cans produce a metallic taste, even with the coating.
Indeed, I was about to post this exact same comment. This is also the reason soda tastes better when it’s bottled vs canned.
Seriously. Buy a bottle of coke and a can of coke, one will taste better than the other. Light will degrade the freshness of beer, but so will plastic. And plastic will do more to you than just taste bad.
I feel like leeching aluminum into the beer would have a much more notable effect than the plastic to be frank.
Heineken is only our #1 export because no dutchman wants to drink it 😂😂
Yep it’s rotten
It is not your #1 export. You’ve got ASML machines, Tulips, Part of Royal Dutch Shell ( previously Anglo Dutch ).
@@oppionatedindividual8256It's a joke 🤓
@@oppionatedindividual8256 Bruh….
@@k4zuh1r0 dude you have an anime pfp don’t be 🤓 anybody 🤡
Retail witchcraft 😂
The actual term is up selling. But it's definitely Retail Witchcraft from here on out.
A.k.a sales
💀
Trans consumerism.
Green and brown and red bottles are the best for freshness. Idk why a beer company would use a blue bottle but its not like you’re storing ur beers in any sort of light anyway so that just leaves oxygen. The surface area of a can seal is way greater than that of a bottle seal and thats just one. Bottles are inert while nothing about a can is.
i love the mouth feel of cold carbonation from glass, but also think it's fun to drink from cans. especially for cheap local beer
people underestimate mouth feel when talking about "taste"
@@jimhall583 god i miss beer so much... my medication makes it make me sick with a couple sips, goddamn kills me
bottles are nicely convenient if you can rarely remember to stick a mug in the fridge
You guys switched places. Love the variety lol
Also remember the darker colored glass bottles (like the dark brown bottles) block the most light.
Mid tier would be green bottles, but that hardly blocks any light compared to brown.
Clear bottles, like Corona, let all the light through
Which is why Corona says to add lime, it fixes the off taste
Yes we all saw the food theory episode
Dark beer tastes like shit
@@ClownScript that's quite a broad statement. I'm glad YOU saw it...
@@FeIonKeller it's by favorite beer, but definitely needs the lime. I keep a bottle of "Real Lime" with my Corona and give it a squeeze when I open one. Corona and Guinness are the only beers I've found that actually taste good but Corona needs the lime
Glass is a better insulator than aluminum. So once you get it really cold, it will stay colder longer
But a can has a better thermal inductive capacity so the temperature loss will be confined to simply frequency not proton mass.
@@triskits_mmm Boy spitting absolute nonsense 😂
And it's all good as long as it stays in a pitch black room or whatever
@@cuauhtemocthethird Tf yall goin on about bruh im trippin 😂
@@StonyCephalopod I'm saying cans are better cause the light can't penetrate. I was just being sarcastic but English is my second language so it didn't really translate well😂
Taste is subjective, but I will firmly standby the fact that beer in a bottle is better than one from a can. That being said I don't really drink beer much and mainly use it for cooking, lol.
What recipes you got that require beer
I stopped drinking old English 40s when they stopped selling it in a glass bottle. The plastic just makes it taste way worse. A glass old e 40 and some blunts use to be my go to. Sober now, but ya that shit was great together. Liquid gold!
Depends on the beer
@@pelletrouge3032probably like bear battered fried food if I’m guessing
@@pelletrouge3032 Beer is used in batters.
It’s also used for some dipping sauces.
A lot of folks use beer when searing meat.
there’s lots of things you can do in the kitchen with beer.
Actually he's very good teacher and helps the customer get to know better
In this universe everyone is hyper-defensive.
Yes
That's our universe haha
Swear, you met all the hyper defensive people from the Andromeda galaxy?
@@changedpace9169 no everyone just acts like they know every possible outcome so they are standing tall on thin ice
@manual blinking yeah, so they get defensive when someone challenges their perception of life or outcomez.
The 5L Heineken kegs got me through uni 😂
They lending me a hand atm lol
Imagine drinking beer
@@Lynchblade you aren’t old enough to drink
@@shredz3327 no shit that’s why I’m imagining lol
@@Lynchblade fair enough
bottles are in a case so i don't find much light hits the bottles anyways. its more the taste of the can on your tongue than the taste of the beer, it does give you a metallic taste so you better pour it into a glass.
Retail witchcraft is the exact phrase I’ve been trying to think of recently
Heineken bottles are intentionally green since the light that can get through them stimulates the production of certain flavor molecules responsible for the signature "skunky" taste of bottled Heineken. They could easily use brown bottles but it's a taste choice.
Thats why coronas are the best outdoor/beach beer. The sunlight gets to it and gives it its flavor
They went to brown bottles as a test and everyone at the home brewery hated it
Love me some skunk terps 🤤
Facts
@@domlosurdo3432 A fellow Mat Pat fan I see 👀
There's a name for that flavor change when beer is bottled in light colored bottles. Like Heineken and Corona. It's called skunking because the light going thru the bottles effects the hop flavors in the beer making them skunky
Yes your correct and idk why but I’ve always liked that skunky taste of that makes sense
@joemoney7640 absolutely my guy I make homebrew and it's a nice characteristic to add to different beer styles and also pretty easy to achieve
@@joemoney7640 Same here, we used to put our Heineken in grow room so it would become skunky or if buying on road we'd get the ones everyone always moved to get to the back.
They taste like shit too
Always thought Heineken kinda tastes like weed lmao must be that skunking you’re talking abt
Beer…. cans, slice your lip open. Bottles, chip a tooth. Keg, break vertebrae being a hero and trying to lift it alone.
I love beer.
the plastic lining in the can does change the flavor. you ever notice that ketchup taste completely different depending on the container it was in. similar phenomenon. theres actually a documented medical phenomenon similar where people who are injected with prepackaged saline solution taste a metallic flavor in the back of their mouth. i guess micro plastics just taste kinda metallic.
You're forgetting there are plastic coatings inside of cans that may leech microplastics into your drink.
Yes but then people drink from plastic bottles which leech a significant amount more. Cans are a good option
@@cantaloupecoke57 however, we're talking about alcohol in glass bottles vs cans, not plastic bottles.
@theicechinchilla and bottles hold nice water, while cans hold corrosive fizzy alcohol or gummy bear juice aka soda, I'm drinking soda as I write this
There's still literally no evidence that microplastics do anything negative to anyone
Stupidest reply I’ve ever seen.
These guys give me dispensary vibes if anything they fit the role too and look the part
At least here in Canada the canned version of "imports" is a local licensed clone not imported at all. There are a couple cases where the inverse is also true like Guiness and Sapporo.
City
I believe the bottles taste better due to the absence of the plastic lining in the aluminum cans. Some taste worse than others depending on shipping constraints. hot cans leak plastic into the beverage
I completely agree
I also agree, I always enjoy an ice cold Bud Light bottle (don’t @ me). Cans will only do fine depending on the situation.
@@alexanderleach2424 yea,if I know a plastic water bottle or beer or whatever a
Has gotten hot and cooled down I’ll pour the top out before I drink any cuz I noticed when (albeit these water bottle had prolly got over a hundred degrees and cooled down over 39 times) I drank water out of a water bottle it had a weird plasticy texture and when I spit it out I could see a layer of plastic at the top😮😮😮😂😂 gross af,fuck micro plastics😂😂😂
You absolutely taste plastic if you drink beer from plastic bottles!! For me it is the same discussion if man can have periods!!
Bottling has more oxygen though so even if it's better tasting for a week it goes bad 3 months faster
If you're in Australia and you're drinking import beer, corona, Heineken, Stella, or most large scale brand imports, then the beers are made here and the reason they vary in taste is because of the water being used. The yeast strain is proprietary so that can be moved globally but water is the thing that changes the flavor and this is the same for beer made from Tasmania or mainland Australia. The water change means a change of flavor which is why some people perceive the flavor as being different from a keg and from a bottle or can, because it's not the same thing( technically)
Additionally in Australia, wild turky and cola is canned over here because it's logistically ridiculous to ship cans overseas when we can just import a large format container of white label bourbon from the wild Turkey Distillery.
The cola isn't coke either, it's just white label cola.
That's why a wild Turkey and cola tastes different built in a glass than from a can, it's just two different things.
"Reatail witchcract" got me dead😂
Why is this channel so awesome and great acting
My grandfather worked high up in Heineken and he always said the worst thing they did where the green bottles. They actually had a pact with other Dutch beer companies to use the same brown bottle but they eventually broke that pact.
There is BPA lined in cans. Bottles don’t have that, and BPA is actually known to raise high blood pressure. So if you’re a big beer drinker and have high blood pressure but don’t want to change how much beer you drink, try switching to bottles only(including soda and such) and see where your blood pressure goes.
A quick Google search reveals a vast majority of cans no longer contain BA lining
@@cantaloupecoke57 FALSE!
I dunno where u from, but here there is no plastoc in the can. And BPA is illegal in food packaging
@@hg2blackcat411 it's true. Dont spread misinformation
@@cantaloupecoke57 Matrix turd. Believes everything they read 🐑
This short popped up as I was drinking my Heineken. Definitely getting spied on.
he moves like a merchant NPC from a game
a can has a small plastic layer inside, that's why it tastes different. just get a barrel but not heineken
The mini Heineken kegs are pretty cool. 5 liters, so not much.
@@shilohmaverick898 all heineken is horse piss
Yup, dad always got all his drinks (waters and sodas) in a glass bottle, though didn't care much to do it for alcoholic beverages. And damn was he right, borjomi (mineral water) from a glass bottle tastes so much fresher.
Bro where do you find glass bottled water
@@NoseCandyKermit it's rare, they also took that water off sale because of this dumbass war and because it's a "russian product". Was a good mineral water and a great hangover cure.
@@arichiquabtd8092 That's unfortunate. For hangovers I'd recommend Liquid IV drink mix. It's sold at Walmart. Just pour it in a water bottle and take some excedrin migraine before bed. Works nicely.
@@NoseCandyKermit yes, that electrolyte powder mix has saved me a few more times than I'd like to admit.
@@NoseCandyKermit in every single store? Now im rlly interested where u from 😂
I like this guy, he always gives some educational insight and tries to help them find the best deal
The material of the container changes the taste. Glass leaves less trace in the drink than aluminum, with plastic bottles being the worst at it, adding chemicals to the drink.
I just love bottle beers way more than cans. Maybe i like my beer to be enlightened 😅
Aluminum also affects the taste
Shamrocks ☘️ ☘️ ☘️
@@jgarcia2680 *Aluminium*
Also worth noting that aluminum cans generally have an internal plastic coating that will, over time, leech chemicals into the beverage.
It's not enough to make the beverage unsafe (as long as you consume it before the expiration date), but it is certainly enough to have a subtle impact on the taste
I think it’s the flow. The nice slick bottle neck and mouth deliver a nostalgic and familiar feel. While a can has a strange and changing shape. Not to mention there are tastebuds on your lips. You can taste the aluminum when you drink for that reason
The perceived coldness of the container also has a surprising effect on the “taste” of the beer. Aluminum feels cooler on the mouth and it changes the experience of drinking.
yes thank you! The can is the actual beer flavour, the bottle is a slighty offed one
The glass bottle is a neutral container, the aluminum can is a reactive container even with the internal plastic lining which is also somewhat reactive to the acids in the beer.
So while a bottle may let more light in, it doesn't directly alter the brew.
So just store your bottle where there isn't light.
This guy isn’t an actor, but he’s logical and a natural teacher. He should be in these videos with his own ideas for interesting topics. The other skinny guy is perfect in skits, this guy would be great in just intellectual videos.
As a mixologist you generally always have me in the first half, but always bring back in the second 😂
Actually cans have a thin lining of plastic on the inside to keep the aluminum from decaying by the acidic property’s of the beverage. Because of this the glass bottles are definitely healthier
The amount of beers you would have to drink for the cans to be "unhealthy" would be WAY outweighed by how unhealthy the beer is. If you drink it before the suggested date, the plastic will have zero effect on how "healthy" the beer is
@@yooowhatupribs not true and not my point. look up how much plastic we actually comsume and youll be shocked it has very real health affects over generations
This is why beer in brown bottles has a longer shelf life than beer in green or clear bottles.
Glass is better hands down... When you sip a beer the material you touch your lips to effects the taste. When you get a beer from a bar or a restaurant, it always comes in a glass, not some aluminum cup... There is a good reason for this, it tastes better in every way. *Hot tip* for the best beer drinking experience, use a paper towel to clean the surface area where the metal cap was attached to the glass bottle. This removes the metallic taste from first sip to last. It's a subtle and small difference, but definitely noticeable.
imagine you go to gordon ramsey's 5 star michalin restaurant, and they serve you on paper plates and plastic utensils. food is 5 star tho
@@MrPaxio that's an interesting concept... Gordon Ramsay's picnic chic 🤣
I experience metal flavor only when drinking from a bottle. That metal cap leaves a strong rust or metal flavor. Never from a can though. Cans are in fact better.
@@danu1807 did you not read what I wrote? Use a paper towel and remove the rust taste from the bottle. Problem solved, and if you do it, bottle is better. Give it a try, here, I'll wait...
@@SuperSqueekyclean I'd rather drink canned beer that's not skunky from the light. It's superior.
For the people who prefer bottles it's probably because glass is an insulator and aluminum is a conductor so glass isn't going to get as warm as quickly if you nurse your beer.
Also, and this goes for any food or drink, the vessel that is used to bring it to your mouth has a huge impact on the taste.
Most of the taste difference is people drinking straight from the can. Pour em out into a glass and they will taste the same if they are both fresh.
Or they are just really used that distinct skunk aroma of Heineken in a green bottle.
Actually Heineken uses green bottles because in Holland they set the bottles in the window seal for 24-48 hours before drinking so that it will get skunked so their is a reason the glass is lighter
This really is a Heineken-specific phenomenon, though - here in the UK at least it tastes FAR better keg/bottle than can, at any size and temperature. I think it might be because they're manufactured in different places
Yeah, also if you pour the can and the bottle into any regular cup ain’t no one able to accurately and consistently tell the difference. The change you “taste” is from smelling the can as your drink it, which in turn throws you off and makes you believe it’s different.
Guy I used to work with said more bacteria grows on metal than on glass. He also said brown bottles were the best type because of light as well as bacteria growing less on glass.
He brought facts to a feelings fight
I always thought it was because smell is a big factor of your taste buds and it’s easier to smell from a bottle or glass than a can
Beer tastes better in a bottle because bottles make a satisfying “clink” sound when you cheers with a friend.
100% depend's on the beer. I find certain beers better in cans certain beers better in bottles. Depend's on type of beer and flavor profile.
The liner in the cans leaches into the beer.
In a brewing class so it's cool to hear this technical stuff outside class
Also if enough time passes glass is the only one where tiny particles from the container don’t leak into the beverage but I would say that your reason is more noticeable
I like drinking basically everything out of glass just because you don't get any other flavor added on. When drinking from a can you get that metallic taste when your tongue or lips hit the can. The drink flavor doesn't change it's just when your taste buds are in contact with the can.
Retail Sorcery 😂
I like how I found this channel like literally the day after I turned 21
Him: "science"
Customer: "witchcraft"
He's like naw I ain't getting that keg ready for u
The problem with a can is they have a plastic liner which absorbs flavor from the beer. Giving you more water and less of everything else. Also bottles don’t allow much light in and light doesn’t affect beer very quickly so as long as you hurry a bottle is better in every single way
The customer sounds like the other clerk 🤣
Essential oils are kept in dark glass bottles such as brown, blue or green to keep the light out...and I'm also certain there is a plastic lining inside the aluminum cans.
Glass bottles are superior.
The main reason Heineken uses green bottles over brown bottles is marketing. When you buy a crate in the Netherlands it's the only brand tbat comes with a piece of cardboard on top, which is meant to keep the light out. A big enemy of beer in cans is the just broken aluminium edge where you opened the can, this reacts with the beer when you drink it and changes the taste. This can easily be solved though by pouring it in a glass
Man’s reading the script 😂🤦🏻♂️
Beer in the can can also leech a metal taste from the aluminum and the plastic liner insider can also leech into the taste making it worse. Bottles on the other hand don't have a leeching problem which usually preserves the taste
i love watching you guys
im convinced the glass bottle itself regardless of color adds to the taste also for example if you take a coke or a beer pour one into a glass or cup or whatever and drink the other straight from the bottle it just tastes different
i think its to do with getting that slower sipping like pour into your mouth instead of a flooding gulp from a glass
or maybe its that you can seal around a bottle limiting air from your taste buds idk just bottles in general taste better
The car in the background was taking all my attention lol
He moves like an NPC compared to the other guy but I feel his words come out with more wisdom than the other guy haha. Love the content anyhow.
There was a scientific experiment that documents what we eat with and drink out of effects the perceived taste we have. The material, the shape of what we use to eat/drink out of and color all effect how we taste as well
Coors banquets out of a stubby on a hot afternoon are goated.
"Heineken?! FUCK THAT SHIT! Pabst blue ribbon!!"
bro is like the liquor store alton brown
Beer bottles are designed in a very specific way. They are designed (just like the glasses) for their kind of beer. So yes bottles taste better and are better.
I like green and clear bottled beer only.. i like that skunk the light gives the beer. Goes well with foods and 🌳🔥
Can tastes better but the feeling of a bottle in your hand is great
Aside from light and oxygen, the material of the vessel you put to your lips has a huge impact on the flavor. Cans will impart an unpleasant metallic taste while glass is fairly tasteless. So the best thing is to pour the fresher beer from a can or keg into a glass to drink.
A can also has a chance to blend in an aluminium flavor, Heineken has a receipe that in the bottle tastes just as good if not better when skunked.
He's using his retail witchcraft now get him boys
You maybe right about bottles having there down side but still taste better then the can do to the air an carbonation that stays in a bottle longer. Also glass is more easily recycled or reused over aluminum cans with plastic coating.
Beer's third enemy is temperature. Keeping beer cold prevents it from changing, including for the "better' (subjective). That's why cellaring is around 52-55F.
Actually, temperature generally only speeds up the effects of oxygen, unless we are talking above 40c, where you have denaturing changes.
No one is talking about the guy revving his engine in the background 😂😂
Cans also have aluminum liner and it affects the taste as well, affects health too.
In my country quite a lot of beers is different from bottle, because they usually make the bottled beer in the original country, while the can is peoduced locally. Even tho they uae the same recepy, they can taste diffferent because of the taste of the water in the given country.
Trynna get you to buy a mini keg! I love them 🥰 they fit in your fridge and supply fresh beers!
I used to live in Amsterdam and the little bottles were preferred by many because so many bars had old tap lines that gave the beer a bad taste
The thing about cans is they are lined with plastic, so if theyre going to be sitting for any amount of time there is a concern on that front. However the beer would likely be skunked by the time the plastic makes an impact on the taste
It's the feel of the glass on my lips. Makes it that much more enjoyable
Bro was reading off a screen in the backround😭😭😭
He did indeed pulls some salesman witchcraft
it's the sensory enjoyment of drinking from glass rather than metal that makes it feel more pleasant...
I've noticed that Blue Moon tastes MUCH better out of a bottle. I wonder how much the shape plays a role in it. Kind of like how there's different beer glasses.
It’s nice because he’s right. The plant hop that’s in beer goes bad and smells bad when there is more light that’s the reason that beer most of the times in in dark bottles to keep out the light. Also temprature affects this plant and oxygen just makes it more old
He neglects to mention though that inevitably aluminum atoms will chip off the inside of the can causing whatever's in a can to get a metallic taste