I find it interesting that so many people shy away from saying that haze is a goal. To me, its one of its defining characteristics of the emerging style, just as it is with a hefe or wit, or just as clarity is important to regular IPA. I get that you might personally be just as happy with a beer that tastes like a NE IPA but looks like a West Coast IPA, but in the sense of describing the style, the haze is one of things that makes it different. If mine came out clear, I would view it as a flaw for a NE IPA. Appearance plays a role in taste, too, I think.
It strikes me as a concession to those who have never had one but are dismissive, so they don't look at you so funny. I say celebrate the diversity! My first NE IPA was like my first sour beer. It was so different than anything I had tried before that it immediately convinced me that craft beer is not a bubble. It showed me that innovation still exists even in the most crowded of styles.
Just my 2 cents, but I'd love to hear others' take on this.![]()
I definitely agree that it's one of the styles defining characteristics and I have no problem at all with my beers ending up hazy. My more recent batches have been borderline opaque. I was just noting that nothing in my process is there solely to create the haze which is what I thought the original question was about. I would no doubt question what happened if a batch finished up clear because that would probably mean I didn't achieve the amount of hop oils in suspension that I was aiming for.