The judges must understand the brewer’s intent in order to properly judge an entry in this category. THE BREWER MUST SPECIFY EITHER THE BEER BEING CLONED, THE NEW STYLE BEING PRODUCED OR THE SPECIAL INGREDIENTS OR PROCESSES USED. Additional background information on the style and/or beer may be provided to judges to assist in the judging, including style parameters or detailed descriptions of the beer. Beers fitting other Belgian categories should not be entered in this category.
All good responses. The only thing I would add would be to list the ingredients in order of intensity. For example:
A sour Belgian-style brown ale that was aged on medium toast American oak for 1.75 years, with 30lbs per barrel of sweet and sour cherries from Michigan and Cab Sav from California wine country.
I'd say "Sour Belgian brown with cherries, oak and red wine." List the base beer first, then the specialty ingredients in order from most intense to least intense.
If you tell us a little about the beer, I'd be happy to help you write a description.
It's a dark strong Belgian type ale with 20% rye malt, homemade candy sugar with tangerine zest and juice used for bottle conditioning.
I'm thinking of entering my Belgian Dark Saison w/ Brett B into competition just to see how it stacks up.
Is the tangerine more dominant than the rye?
I'd say something like "Belgian dark strong with tangerine and malted rye." Or "Rye based Belgian dark strong with tangerines."
Candi sugar is already a pretty common ingredient, so I'd ignore that one. Unless something about it makes it significantly different than commercially available.
I've never entered beers into competition before and am trying to glean what info I can off of old threads about 16E.
When judging is it general practice for judges to divide their rounds?
I.e. 2-3 judges (however many there may be overall divided) take lighter srm beers,another group takes copper/amber beers and another group take darker styles,or something close to this ?
I know in national or international competition (GABF,WBC) judges will split tables for different categories or sub styles,wondering if this is common in homebrew competition as well.
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