LandoLincoln
Well-Known Member
I'm working on my 9th batch. I have made great strides. Just curious when did you folks consider yourself an intermediate? Cheers.
White belt: Gets a homebrew kit for Christmas and uses it. Checks fermentor 50 times a batch and worries if the beer is infected or not.
Yellow belt: Understands and abides by RDWHAHB, BDMA and DFTF. Understands the difference between clean/sanitized/sterile. Has a solid understanding of how clean various equipment needs to be. Understands how important proper fermentation temperature is.
Green belt: Begins to delve into the world of water chemistry and good recipe formulation. Has a solid understanding of the entire process of all-grain brewing and can adjust for SG during the brew day.
Blue belt: Has built his or her own all-grain brew rig and can brew any style on it with solid results. Efficiency numbers are rock solid so there is no longer any need to adjust for SG during the brew day. Has successfully done step mashes and decoction mashes with good results. Can formulate good beer recipes with little outside references.
Red belt: Has become a BJCP Certified judge, can pick out off-flavors with ease and can formulate recipes without consulting any reference materials.
Black belt: Has malted the barley that they have grown, dried the hops that they have grown, harvested wild yeast and have separated good strains from bad strains, have brewed beer using a fire pit, fermented and lagered beer with a lagering cave and the beer comes out exquisite. Can drink any beer and can formulate a clone recipe with a few improvements to the original to suit their tastes.