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National Homebrew Competition 2019

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treacheroustexan

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I didn't see a thread specifically about this years competition, so I figured I would make one and try to keep discussion all in one place.

I applied for 2 entries this year, and this will be my first time entering. I plan on stewarding the Cleveland judging as well.

Good luck to everyone!
 
This will be my second year entering . I shipped 3 entries to Tampa. Hoping the results will come quicker from Tampa then when I did it in nashville...
 
Porter, munich dunkel, Berliner weisse . Shipped during the latest polar vortex ..hoping the berliner didn't freeze .
 
Dropped my entries off Friday. Here they are!
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I sent 3 beers to Tampa last week. They were a fest bier that won gold at a local competition, A pilsner that I would like some feedback on, and a British Golden Ale for the hell of it.
 
If you sent them to Boston, you lucked out. We we given a cold storage facility to keep them in after we sorted last weekend (780 entries) so all your entries are chillin’
 

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My first year entering NHC. I submitted an American IPA, a pineapple hefeweizen and a belgian tripel to the Indianapolis region. Hoping for good feedback or at least a national best of show
 
here's my annual request that we keep details to a minimum for styles where specialty ingredients are used. For instance, beers with fairly rarely-used fruit that are likely the only such beer in the competition.
 
here's my annual request that we keep details to a minimum for styles where specialty ingredients are used. For instance, beers with fairly rarely-used fruit that are likely the only such beer in the competition.

Good point! Just because there may be a lot of judges lurking through these threads, for anyone questioning why.
 
Boston judging is finished, not sure when the results will be up. We had some awesome judges from many other New England and New York clubs come, as well as judges from Sam Adams and other breweries in the area. I can say I had the pleasure of being paired up with the AHA competition organizer John Moorhead to judge wood aged beers in the afternoon, and we scored two in the 40's. If you have never judged, what's even better than getting a great beer in front of you to score, is arriving at the same score as your other judges and not having to adjust. Consensus tastes great!
 
Boston judging is finished, not sure when the results will be up. We had some awesome judges from many other New England and New York clubs come, as well as judges from Sam Adams and other breweries in the area. I can say I had the pleasure of being paired up with the AHA competition organizer John Moorhead to judge wood aged beers in the afternoon, and we scored two in the 40's. If you have never judged, what's even better than getting a great beer in front of you to score, is arriving at the same score as your other judges and not having to adjust. Consensus tastes great!

Lucky you! That’s awesome.
 
does anyone know why the verification process takes so long after the entries are judged? I know they are working their butt off, but just always wondered why it can take up to ten days to get the results posted.
 
does anyone know why the verification process takes so long after the entries are judged? I know they are working their butt off, but just always wondered why it can take up to ten days to get the results posted.

John can, at best, be at one region in a weekend. In those cases sometimes he physically takes the scoresheets with him when going back to Boulder, which saves time on actually sending them to him. Then, he is very thorough, and wants to get things done right. Also, every year there will likely be some unforeseen issue. These tend to be worked out in the early regions, so that he's sure he's got it right by the time he releases results. I find that he's fastest with the later regions. But I'm sure every year is a different kind of cat herding, and only so many lessons learned can be applied.

good luck--
--Michael
 
John can, at best, be at one region in a weekend. In those cases sometimes he physically takes the scoresheets with him when going back to Boulder, which saves time on actually sending them to him. Then, he is very thorough, and wants to get things done right. Also, every year there will likely be some unforeseen issue. These tend to be worked out in the early regions, so that he's sure he's got it right by the time he releases results. I find that he's fastest with the later regions. But I'm sure every year is a different kind of cat herding, and only so many lessons learned can be applied.

good luck--
--Michael
Thank you for the thorough explanation. I never realized all that went into getting the scores posted after judging was complete.
 
Thank you for the thorough explanation. I never realized all that went into getting the scores posted after judging was complete.

Yeah, that was great, thanks. I've got 2 entries in at San Diego for judging this weekend - American Porter and American Stout (my first BIAB). Probably the best couple of beers I've made, so I've got fingers crossed.
 
So how does the second round work? Is that what the 2nd bottle is for or does the brewer have to brew a whole new batch? This is my first time entering so not sure how all this works.
 
The second round is completely separate, you will have to ship new beers to the judging location given by the AHA. Depending on the beer you may need to brew a new batch like an IPA so it is fresh for the next round.

When I made the second round I had to rebrew and my efficiency went up so unfortunately my light lager finished too high and I lost points for being out if style.
 
So how does the second round work? Is that what the 2nd bottle is for or does the brewer have to brew a whole new batch? This is my first time entering so not sure how all this works.

If you entered a beer that ages well, you can send more bottles of the same beer if you have it, otherwise would need to rebrew. When my Schwarzbier advanced two years ago, I took judge comments from other comps it was in and used that to tweak the next batch. Went from a 38 in first round to a 41, but did not place.
 
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