I was originally going to just post this in "What are you drinking?" but after cataloging the first few days I realized that there'd probably be enough for a topic of it's own :)
Girlfriend Sarah and I are on a two month trip that'll take us through China, various European destinations, Canada and the USA. For the first time ever I've actually been making brief tasting notes for most of the beers I'm trying, and I thought folks here might be interested to hear some of my impressions.
So without further ado... Beer in Beijing:
YANJING
The cheapest and most popular local brew. Priced from about $0.50-$1.00 for a 500ml bottle. We had (at least) three different versions of Yanjing, 12°P, 10°P and 8°P (interesting that they differentiate them by degrees Plato. There's no sign of a %ABV on the labels.)
They all had relatively similar flavours. Crisp, dry, light and "rice-y." The 12°P version seemed to have a touch of sourness that was quite agreeable, and was probably my favourite of them.
These beers are a fabulous illustration of how sometimes the place and situation can make the beer. If I'd tried them back in NZ, I'd probably have written them off as bland, fizzy yellow water, but drinking them on 30C evenings with delicious Chinese food in Beijing they were really enjoyable.
BEIJING OKHOTSK BEER
The only craft beer brewed in Beijing. A branch of a Japanese chain of brewpubs. They had a Pilsner, an ale, a Mild Stout and a Weisen. The beers were uniformly too sweet and under-hopped, especially the ale, which had virtually no hop aroma. The weisen was estery almost to a fault. The mild stout (maybe more of a brown porter really?) was the best of the bunch. Tons of chocolate malt flavour, and the roasted malts helped to cut the sweetness a bit so that it was actually pretty pleasant.
As much as I hate to admit it, I actually enjoyed the Yanjings more than any of these.
BEIJING BEER by ASAHI
A bit of malt flavour in there, but it was so buried by the tide of diacetyl that you could barely taste it. I think this had the most diacetyl of any beer I've ever tried. Dreadful.
Beijing was an awesome place. Not the centre of the beer universe, but a fabulous stopover on the way to Europe, with stunning sights, fabulous food, and friendly, charming people.
Next stop is in Munich, so there'll REALLY be some beers to talk about there :)