Maybe I'll see if they need help stewarding.... sounds like a better first step.
Donasay said:I always thought it would be neat to take the same beer and submit it under 2 or 3 different categories, I wonder if the judges would even notice. I know the beer would be scored differently based on how well it fits the style, but it might be fun just to try.
Rather than start another thread, I thought I'd post here for back-story goodness. In any case, I licked my wounds and submitted again for comp. I pulled a Bronze with an American Amber at a relatively small and obscure comp in Hilton Head, SC. I'm still waiting to see the score sheet, but it's plenty encouraging.
More often than not I grab the beer cause I have never tried it and the label was nice.
Good luck Bobby! Homebrew Competitions are a lot like BBQ Competitions in my experience and is the luck of the draw if the judge likes your beer, period.
I get disappointed when I don't place, but then again, I don't need the validation of the judges. I get that from my neighbors, and that's more than I can ask for.
It's nice to get a medal or ribbon every once in a while, but ya gotta take it with grain of salt with some of the judges out there.
Did you bottle your Amber when kegging or did you bottle forced carbed beer?
Really? You've never been in the mood for a nice roasty stout on a cold winter's night or a crisp lager in the summer? I had my first lambic about two months ago. I remember seeing one in the store in the big city and getting all excited because I'd never had a lambic. The label meant absolutely nothing to me. Never does.
Perhaps you are missing the point of BJCP competitions. To brew a simply 'great' beer is always based on personal taste, which is entirely subjective and varies from person to person based on the types of beers they prefer.I refuse to enter competitions period. I abhor stylism in beer by the simplistic narrow margins it creates.
I refuse to enter competitions period. I abhor stylism in beer by the simplistic narrow margins it creates.
Ah. Now the truth comes out.More so now than before I knew any BJCP judges personally. the judges I have known, excepting a few, were more about exercising their thesaurus in written word than they were about anything else. And in some cases I get the impression that "flaws" are manufactured (subconciously perhaps) because there is no way to make the "perfect beer" so there HAS to be something "wrong" with the beer.
I have attended beer evaluation workshops, doctored my own beers, sampled Enthusiast altered Bud, and to date I still have a hard time discerning "flaws" that these judges use to drop the numbers. and several of them smoke waaaaaay more than I do.
I just tend to enjoy beer for what it is, rather than what I think it should be based on a style guideline.
[steps off podium and trips over microphone cord]
Cheers,
Bob
EDITED TO ADD: Please permit me to apologize. I am overly harsh above. My intent is unchanged, but I should not have been so scathingly abrasive.
Good example to illustrate your point.In the context of the narrow margins of a guideline. All to often I have listened to judges comment that Beer A is perceived as too alcoholic to fit in the style of intent thus, it is scored poorly because it was not eneterd in a category that "allowed" for a stronger FG. Now, I can understand the difference between a beer intended to fit within a style that maxes at say 5% and the actual beer comes in at 9% being a valid issue. But, if the style maxes out at 5% and the judges perception says it's more like 6% and thus MUST be fitting of another category and is scored down because of this, I take offense (for lack of better words).
This is a joke, right?
The styles are lamentably broad, and in many cases overlap to the point the same beer can be entered in three or more categories. Read up the thread a bit.
The margins aren't "narrow"; they barely exist. They aren't "simplistic" in the slightest.
I've said it in other threads, and it bears repeating here: The style categories have nothing to do with brewing. They have everything to do with drinking. They are there as a frame of reference for the drinker to approach what you've brewed. Humans love categories and pigeonholes. It's part of human nature. We are also lazy; it's just simpler to say "American Pale Ale" than "An amber-to-straw-colored, fairly dry ale with pronounced bitterness and a distinctly American hops flavor and aroma profile."
If you feel style constricts you, don't use the terminology if you don't want. But I'm gonna tell you something: I don't care what you've brewed in your entire career. You put either a glass of it or the recipe in front of me, I'll put it in at least one BJCP category. It is impossible to brew totally out of at least one style.
Ah. Now the truth comes out.You dislike competition because you feel the judges unqualified, and that the descriptors used by judges are useless because you can't use them.
I just wish to point out something: That you have a hard time discerning flaws doesn't mean they don't exist. I know I can detect them. I trained my senses to detect them.
Sounds to me like you're not invested enough in the process to really learn it; you've admitted you don't like the process, so you don't really want it to work. It's like a husband who's dragged to the marriage counselor - counseling only works if both parties want it to work. You don't want the judging process to be validated in any way, so you - consciously or subconsciously - prevent yourself from allowing it to work.
If you don't want to compete, no one is holding a gun to your head. Some people, including me, think it's a worthwhile way for brewers who are interested in perfecting their beers (to style) or technique to do so.
Maybe that's just me.
Cheers,
Bob
EDITED TO ADD: Please permit me to apologize. I am overly harsh above. My intent is unchanged, but I should not have been so scathingly abrasive.
I tend to enjoy beer more if I can sense it through the framework of a style descriptor. If the label says "Porter", I have some idea of what it's going to be like before I plunk down my credit card.
[steps off soapbox, trips over trombone and falls through bass drum]
Um. What about that counteracts what I said? I'm not sure what you're getting at.
Bob
What I'm getting at is that I don't want to brew a caricature of the style. That is not why I started brewing. The judging is flawed (to be expected with all volunteers) but that does not mean you, or them know more than the rest of us, but that you can recognize a caricature of the style. Good for you
I'm drunk forgive me
It was BMBF'd about two weeks prior to the judging. I personally find the beer to be slightly astringent so I'm wondering if that will be noted on the sheet. If my brew club would move to a more official feedback mechanism for our flight beers, I'd be less likely to spend the entry fees.
With my luck, winning bronze will be tainted by a discovery that there were only three beers at that table.
Better brewer? or this is how you learn to brew more true to style?I read his comments and take heed. THIS is how you become a better brewer.
AmenI still say comps and judging have their place, but it is a grain of salt kind of thing.
So the question is, are their specialty judges like in Dog shows. Some are not qualified to judge "best in Show" but can judge "best in Class" while others are only qualified to judge "Best in Breed?"We actually need more qualified judges to raise the standard even higher. Maybe we should do some training through this forum.