Passload
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2005
- Messages
- 355
- Reaction score
- 13
brewman ! said:What is BMC ?
Bud, Miller, Coors
brewman ! said:What is BMC ?
jezter6 said:I think ANY beer qualifies. This isn't a style competition where we're judging color, mouthfeel and such to the style of a crappy light american lager. This is a taste only thing. The only requirement is that it's beer and not another alcohol.
Any color of beer is fine, it's just the more specialty grains you use, the more it costs per gallon. Although the rules aren't finalized, I think that if you spend the extra 10c/gallon to make it taste better, you're more likely to win against someone who has the lowest cost recipe that tastes like pee in a bottle.
For all the reasons you mentioned, I agree completely. April 1 is an awesome day to hold this competition!!!jezter6 said:April 1 would be a great dedline for this kind of funny competition.
I MAY add those as sources, however, someone suggested restricting this entire competition down to a SINGLE online vendor for pricing. The reason being to drive more internet traffic to his site and get people accustomed to using his website. In exchange, maybe get them to supply a gift certificate for the winner or maybe offer the winning recipe as a supercheap kit.One rules suggestion; I would allow freshops.com and hopsdirect.com, along with Austinhomebrew and the others, as appropriate pricing souces for hops.
orfy said:What about partial mashers.
A third price target?
I was thinking of mashing a couple of old socks to see if the had annything to the flavour!
Yeast must be priced as stated previously (one-third the cost of the yeast from an online supplier). However, if you harvest the yeast from a bottle of beer, you do NOT have to include the cost of the beer in your price calculation.
orfy said:Technique and pictures to be supplied?
Toot said:A most excellent idea with the socks, but I am not sure of the best way to include partial mashers. What does everyone else think of that? Rule suggestions? Or is it too complicated?
Toot said:I read a thread about harvesting yeast from chimay. To encourage low-cost brewing and inventive techniques, I am proposing the following rule:
Yeast must be priced as stated previously (one-third the cost of the yeast from an online supplier). However, if you harvest the yeast from a bottle of beer, you do NOT have to include the cost of the beer in your price calculation. The yeast will be considered "free".
the_bird said:Eh....
If you can't sparge, that goes against the underlying concept, which is what is the cheapest way of creating a drinkable beer. Not allowing PMers to sparge, artificially constaining their efficiency, goes completely against that.
I'll prolly go the AG route, anyway.![]()
olllllo said:I've been casually following this and I have some thoughts.
What Toot and some of the other posters here are doing is admirable. There is alot of thought and work going into this.
I realize that this is just a sounding board for the contest/collaboration, but it would be helpful if Toot posted the agreed upon rules (or mostly agreed) in the original post so they can be understood (or debated) without having to re-read the entire thread.
Here's what I'm not clear about:
Bulk Pricing- Shouldn't that apply to everyone or no one? I can buy bulk DME or LME just as the AG can buy grain.
Shipping on ingredients? Even if the best price is at Northern, shipping can break the deal.
I don't want to agree on that because buying ingredients for a 5 gallon batch is EXPENSIVE. I agreed that assuming bulk grains for AG brewers makes sense because the prices of those grains are commonly available and active brewers may actually buy in bulk. However, for extract brewers, there are fewer options. If I want to you Munton&Fison, it comes in two sizes. That's it. So, by assuming a large batch, it allows people to buy the bigger can. And yes, there's also "bulk LME/DME" It seems that 25lbs will get you that pricing. So my thinking was that if Extract brewers assume a 25 gallon batch, they will get that pricing (if they choose to use no-name ingredients), but it won't be as unrealistic as assuming that an Extract Brewer is going to buy a 55 gallon drum because, let's be honest here, nobody really buys that much extract at one time for homebrewing.Batch Size- My assumption is that most extract make 5 gal batches and AG 10. Why not agree upon that. Last I saw was 25 gallon batches.
At the end of the day, isn't the goal to have 2 or 3 tasty yet inexpensive recipies for AG or Extract Brewers?
It just looks like there are going to be an A** LOAD of rules.
Here's my quick and dirty solution. It will take a great deal of trust and maturity about things, but I know this group is capable of it.
There will be a 3 component challenge with perhaps 3 categories Extract, AG, PM.
Challenge 1. Taste test
Everyone makes what they think is the cheapest beer they can make and document it. There will be a minimum set of rules. Judges will rate the best beers in each class.
Recipes will be posted and made public after the tasting date. While collaboration is a good thing, we want to encourage creativity for the contest. Collaboration will certainly occur after the competition, but until then, we want to minimize idea theft.Challenge 2. Cost
The documented recipies and techniques will be posted along with the costs that the recipe creator came up with (trust). You could even create a survey thread for each and people could vote/debate as to whether the recipe and technique is reasonable and sound. Those that can back up thier facts will probably do better.
Challenge 3. Replication
The recipes that rise to the top will be replicated by people to see if in fact the costs are in line and the techniques can be replicated.
Whaddya think?
jezter6 said:I agree we should try to get rules lite as best possible. However, I do like sliding scale of points based on cost, abv, etc.
I am worried about Toot's latest statement about writing out techniques and pictures...all of that should be remotely optional for those that want to do it, but requiring picture taking as part of the competition makes it more difficult for people to enter, which is the opposite of the goal (get as many entries as possible).
Hopefully Toot can work with one (or two or three) of the online vendors to get some prizes worked out, and that would help solidify my request for a single price point for all ingredients.