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No, I don't.
I also personally take enormous pleasure in people who do judge, but don't know the difference between a white zin and a nice rose. |
It's kind of oxymoronic to be a snob about beer. Like judging people for the type of Crocs they wear. |
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I really try not to judge and I would never say this out loud...but yeah I do. White Zin, Pink Moscato, any thing with a picture of a flip flop on it I find undrinkable and if people willingly put it in their body then I lose a bit of respect.
And I have to agree with PP about rose...I've had some supposedly "fine" rose from France and I thought it tasted like cough syrup. |
This. I really don't care. People like what they like. I don't like Chardonnay in general myself, but I don't think that's some kind of clue to someone's personality. I don't judge you based on whether you drink cheap wine or expensive wine, or white or red, or French or Australian. I will, however, judge you based on your attitude towards wine. If you're a pretentious snob, I will judge that. If you disparage people who drink things you don't like, I will judge that. It's just grape juice, after all. It's supposed to taste good, so drink what you like. |
| I don't really judge people on the wine they choose to drink but I might find myself judging the amount of wine I see someone consume. |
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I consider merlot and chardonnay "happy hour wine" that is cheap and generally non-offensive. They can be done well or done poorly, the same way that "chicken breast" can be done well or poorly and is generally non-offensive to most diners.
I do not particularly care for sweet wines myself and have had a lot of disappointments associated with rose(-ay!). I have also had some really killer dry roses that I wish I'd written down the names of so I could seek them out. |
I almost married a Parisian and therefore spent a fair amount of time in Paris. I couldn't believe I could buy wine for $2-3/bottle at the supermarket and it was really good (and the kind his family served). When I was leaving one time, I looked to buy an expensive bottle to bring back to the States for a relative, as a gift. I told him I wanted to spend about $25. He told me no such bottle existed. We finally found an upscale wine store and other than one or two very expensive bottles, nothing cost $25. Ever since that experience, I laugh when people try to judge others' sophistication on wine price. |
| friends don't let friends drink white zinfandel |
Ooh, you've never had a good beer, have you? |
Only if they're sanctimonious about it. |
Beer snobs are worse than wine snobs. Tedious idiots. It is just beer, for God's sake. |
+10000 A voice of reason. Americans tend to think they are more sophisticated than they are. |
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There are definitely wines I don't care for, but really people just have different tastes. Lately I've been liking Malbecs and dry Roses (ice cold, on the porch on a summer evening ... heaven!). But I know a lot of people don't care for a peppery malbec or don't care for roses. To each their own.
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| I have strong opinions about the wine I drink - hate oaky American chardonnays, for example, but I don't judge others. After all, haven't we all done some fucked-up things in our time? |
There are recipes for beer that involve measuring ingredients, adding them for flavor, adding them at exactly the right time...brewing can be an art. But your comment shows a different kind of snobbery, doesn't it? |