L1011 wrote: » The price actually puts people off I suspect - it's seen as what poor auld lads drink in many pubs.
irish_goat wrote: » Few more reasons;Very few pubs outside of Munster sell it
[*]It gets next to no advertising [*]Whilst it's from Cork, it's made by Heineken, this would put some people off
[*]There's better craft stout alternatives
[*]Guinness drinkers would find the flavour is stronger than they're used to
CrankyHaus wrote: » Is it worth a go? Never gave it a shot myself.
irish_goat wrote: » Few more reasons;Very few pubs outside of Munster sell it It gets next to no advertising Whilst it's from Cork, it's made by Heineken, this would put some people off There's better craft stout alternatives Guinness drinkers would find the flavour is stronger than they're used to
machaseh wrote: » Also, for some reason any time I order murphy's in dublin it tastes like absolute sh1te, hardly drinkable. While the one I had in cork tasted lovely.
machaseh wrote: » But cheaper is better right?
machaseh wrote: » Not in the dublin pubs I go to, it is available in most pubs I visit here in Dublin.
antfin wrote: Murphy's is also brewed by Heineken in the same brewery as Beamish so there's not really any ideological reason to prefer one over the other.
irish_goat wrote: » It's available in the pubs you go perhaps, but a casual drinker will tend to drink the same beer from pub to pub. So if Beamish is not available they'll drink Guinness and then when they go to a pub that serves Beamish they'll likely just stick to Guinness. I wouldn't say there's much Murphys sold in Dublin either though.
Geuze wrote: » I drink it, although it's available in few pubs in Galway. Murphy's, High street = I think 4.30, versus I think 4.60 for Guinness Carroll's, Dominick street = 4.00 PJs, Lower Salthill = I think 3.60 or 3.80 I don't see Murphys anywhere in GY, although somebody told me that Murphy's pub have all three stouts.
L1011 wrote: » Psychology isn't that simple. "Ah, that's cheap ****e, I can afford the good stuff..."
nthclare wrote: » I haven't drank in 17 years, but there was nothing nicer than a beamish keg that was brought across the road from the brewery, installed in situ and a pint less travelled goes down well I'll tell you.
One_More_Mile wrote: » Drink it all the time. Better than Guinness and Murphy's imo. Price is a bonus. Not sure I'd drink it outside of Munster mind, the same for Murphy's