MrAverage
Well-Known Member
No, absolutely not. We don't live in the past. We make and drink beer now. You don't judge a pizza based on how closely it resembles the first pizza. What people like evolves over time and so should the guidelines.
Of course tastes evolve and that's why the BJCP program has added style categories as new beer styles have developed. Even so, the original styles don't change. They continue to exist as new ones are added.
The creation of an American IPA subcategory acknowledges the evolution of the IPA style from its original form - British IPA, BUT the guidelines for the original form do not accurately reflect the then beer as it was brewed by the majority of British breweries for the past 150 years or so. It's as if the BJCP guidelines for the Bohemian Pilsner category were based on the current specs for Budweiser...after all, isn't Bud an evolution of Bohemian Pilsner?
Just as Budweiser is not the beer that was brewed in Cezcoslovakia (sp?) and therefore should not be used as the standard against which Bohemian Pilsner is judged, the specs in the British IPA guidelines do not accurately describe
the beer that was brewed and called IPA by British brewers up until very recently.