slym2none
"Lazy extract brewer."
I recant everything I said. Gila is right and I am wrong. I'd go eat crow, but first I have to clean up all this egg on my face.
LOVE the new av!!!

I recant everything I said. Gila is right and I am wrong. I'd go eat crow, but first I have to clean up all this egg on my face.
True, but it's easy to give a good version of it, without giving the real recipe. I do a BBQ rub that people have asked me about (which actually isn't measured by volume), I do it by sight and taste, but none the less, I always say, the base is half paprika and half brown sugar, depending on the container you are using. Then I list out the other ingredients. I even give out my "secret" which is a little cinnamon in the mix.
LOVE the new av!!!
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Under no circumstances is a Brewer/Brewery required to tell you anything about his process or ingredients.
I have met a huge number of Brewers, both commercial, craft and home, some of them will give you their recipe, some will talk shop and others only want to know if you are going to finish the beer and leave. I have tried to talk shop with some that have no interest and leave it at that. There are others that know I'm in the process of opening my own brewery that think I'm going to steal their recipes (and some of them have actually taken my recipes). Personalities are a thing we all have to learn to deal with. I look at it this way, if they don't want to discuss their beers, that is up to them, if they do, then great! As for my recipes, I create everyone of them, I'll talk process and ingredients with anyone that wants to know. I'm not going to think they are going to steal my recipe, because they will be brewing on different equipment, under different circumstances and most likely different amounts anyway, so they may get close, but they will never actually match mine perfectly and I'm good with that.
Mouse, when you open, can I be a guest brewer? I wouldn't brew, but I can clean a mashtun and rock rubber boots like few others.
Maybe its better to ask about successes. Seems people are reluctant to get all bubbly and excited to talk about their failures.
Interestingly, the GABF winners are in group #1, with a few in group #2. Some of the ones who have blown me off completely have had some of the worst beers, but not all of them.
This kind of reminds me of BBQ rub recipes. If someone says "secret ingredients" then people think they are being a jerk or rude.
What do you think is the story there?
I think it's that he knows it's not good, and doesn't want to discuss it at all with people.
I agree. But why would a brewer continue to tap a beer he knows/suspects isn't going to be enjoyed by his clientele? Especially if it's one of the go-to quaffs in his establishment. Had it been me as the owner, I would have said something like, "Yeah, I know it isn't that great. It was kind of experimental and we're working on a new recipe. Sorry you don't like it. Here, have a glass of something else on the house." Otherwise, it sounds to me like he's got a gun pointed at his foot...
The brewer just sunk a bunch of $$ into that batch. He probably weighed his decision between "Should I just dump it and lose all that money?" vs. "Should I serve it and try to recoup some of my investment?"
He chose the latter, hoping that it won't hurt his brewery's rep. But it could be a shot in the foot.
Or option #3 -- Keep serving a bad-tasting beer in spite of the investment, and drive customers away from his establishment and his [potentially] good beers.
Or option #3 -- Keep serving a bad-tasting beer in spite of the investment, and drive customers away from his establishment and his [potentially] good beers.
Or option #3 -- Keep serving a bad-tasting beer in spite of the investment, and drive customers away from his establishment and his [potentially] good beers.
I think we need to be careful about using the label bad beer. It might be a failure for the style but I doubt we are talking something that causes you to gag. Our little friendly brew culture is starting to get an attitude like the wine culture of old. If a beer is liked by the masses who don't know as much as us brewers then why not sell it? On the flip side, the best made beer in an unpopular style might not sell at all leaving a world class brewer out of business.
But if it's bad and it doesn't sell well then they should consider dumping it.
I know lots of people say that they're in no way obligated to share their specific ingredients, but I think that goes against everything that beer culture has been about for so long. Not only is a good beer just as much about process as ingredients, it's also about equipment. Successful beers are also not necessarily about how good it is, but about the culture surrounding the brewery. It's the pr and advertisement that will often make a beer successful.
When you get a meal at most nice restaurants, the wait staff will tell you every little detail about the dish. Beer should be no different. Tell me the hops and grain that you use, so I know what I'm about to order. I refuse to buy bottles that have zero description. And I would definitely be put off by some proprietary blend BS.
When you get a meal at most nice restaurants, the wait staff will tell you every little detail about the dish. Beer should be no different. Tell me the hops and grain that you use, so I know what I'm about to order. I refuse to buy bottles that have zero description. And I would definitely be put off by some proprietary blend BS.
I think they know that their beers suck, and don't want to hear it from someone who can tell them that.
If I was a professional and putting out sub-par product, I sure wouldn't want a BJCP judge and knowledgeable brewer to sit and critique it.
When you get a meal at most nice restaurants, the wait staff will tell you every little detail about the dish. Beer should be no different. Tell me the hops and grain that you use, so I know what I'm about to order. I refuse to buy bottles that have zero description. And I would definitely be put off by some proprietary blend BS.