who the flocc is talking about buying expensive equipment?!?
Sorry brah just assume most people have more than $20 invested
But when I first started brewing I was shocked at my local beer store how worried they were about not having an ingredient or getting the weight right. They were like you mean you want to substitute! Or that I would just change the recipe adding different s*** as I saw fit. I can say with definitive proof and knowledge what you put in it is what you get out and yes affected by the process. I've tasted every grain in every store I've been in if you haven't then you really don't understand a very massive piece of brewing.
As someone who has submitted beers with average scores as low as 25 and as high as 44, I would say that luck has a bit to do with it as well. My breakdown would be:
33% Recipe
33% Process
34% What the judges are looking for
and what if they do? are you better than them because you didn't "need" to spend as much as them? are they arrogant for having more expensive equipment? why would this even be brought up when no one else had mentioned it?
Frankly, if you want to win awards, you have to learn how to 'game' competitions.
I don't really design beers to strictly meet BJCP categories. I brew what I like. There are a lot of tricks to winning awards, not necessarily the same as making great beer. A dead perfect blonde ale can win a category, but probably won't win a best of show.
Finally, know the rules - is it BJCP 08, 15, just people's choice...
process and recipe formulation have everything to do with what makes a great beer, not luck. luck runs out. it's personal taste that ultimately decides if your beer is great. some folks don't like stouts (heathens!), some folks don't like IPAs (more heathens!), some don't like sours (heathens to a slightly lesser degree). but it doesn't mean because any of the people (dirty dirty heathens!) don't like certain offerings that these beers aren't great to the people that drink/brew them. nailing down process will eliminate things like oxidation, skunking, infection, and yeast derived off flavors from stressed yeast. nailing down recipe formulation/quality ingredients will eliminate all sorts of flavors that don't seem to work well together and ingredient derived off flavors (usually perceived as a staleness and or twang). but in the end, it's what you taste and what you like. what truly makes a really good or great beer will depend on your personal taste profile. are you hitting what you're aiming for?What makes a great beer depends a lot on the preference of the drinker.
so I can have a great recipe and it will always turn out to be great beer? I don't have to sanitize anymore? sweet! :rockin:
What I was getting at there wasn't very well said lol. So if I forget roasted barley when I am making a stout, that would be a much bigger fkup than mashing a few degrees high or low (which is a process mistake).
There will always be fundamentals, which I consider in a different category than process. Sanitization would be a fundamental, as well as converting grain to sugar during the mash process which can happen at a wide temp range. Process would have you mash at a specific temp within that range... so an IPA I might always mash 148-152.
If you really want to win the County fair ribbon wouldn't you make one pie.......?
Sure. ONE PIE... that is the product of perhaps years, if not generations, of making that "same" pie a thousand times, tweaking, changing, adding, subtracting, with different ingredients, times, equipment, conditions --- whatever it takes to get it to the point that at County Fair time, it appears it was just something that Aunt Bessie threw together on a whim one Saturday afternoon when she had nothing else to do.
Fun! Could somebody who watched that person make a similar pie?
as stated before: process and recipe formulation have everything to do with what makes a great beer, not luck. luck runs out. it's personal taste that ultimately decides if your beer is great. some folks don't like stouts (heathens!), some folks don't like IPAs (more heathens!), some don't like sours (heathens to a slightly lesser degree). but it doesn't mean because any of the people (dirty dirty heathens!) don't like certain offerings that these beers aren't great to the people that drink/brew them. nailing down process will eliminate things like oxidation, skunking, infection, and yeast derived off flavors from stressed yeast. nailing down recipe formulation/quality ingredients will eliminate all sorts of flavors that don't seem to work well together and ingredient derived off flavors (usually perceived as a staleness and or twang). but in the end, it's what you taste and what you like. what truly makes a really good or great beer will depend on your personal taste profile. are you hitting what you're aiming for?
So, are you saying that, all things being equal, a great beer comes down to personal preference? And if that's the case, why is there a BJCP? Is it just so someone can hear someone else tell them how great their beer is and get a medal for it? Is it possible then that my beer, although it will never be judged, is potentially as great as one that has been? Just askin'.
Um, I feel memory-deficient/challenged.
Ok back on topic. How come nobody's arguing glass or plastic yet?
the greatest spiced beer in the world? a friend of his, from a brewery no less, told him it was the greatest beer ever brewed? I made an awesome video as a homage to the greatest brew master of all time. his original video was deleted along with the thread. but you can get the point from mine though.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDA9qvaJpF8
You're telling me...
This is NOT the greatest beer in the world?
This is just a tribute? ;-)
So a couple points, I'm a chef so I know what you mean about winging it. And it doesn't matter, until it does. Can I make chicken marsala with sweet vermouth or madeira - of course I can. Is it authentic, no.
I make a lot of beer that is too strong and too hoppy for style. I also go very low on esters in most cases. I serve my beer too cold and too carbonated. Because it's mine.
Great beer is clean - which means no flaws. Appropriate levels of esters, DMS, carbonation, etc. Great beer doesn't need time because it's "still a little green" - it never had the flaw in the first place.
Great beer is consistent - anyone can luck out on one batch. Making the same product repeatedly, while maintaining standards is tough.
Great beer is obviously great - I don't love Belgians and sours, but I sure as hell can appreciate a great version. When a beer is so good you like something you don't like, that's great.
So yes, you can make nice beer to drink that is whatever you want - and that's super cool. But say you want to make an Orval clone, there's ingredients you need and steps you have to take to get that result - and you can't half ass that.
As a chef - you can make mashed potatoes, but there's really only one way to make Puree de Pmme de Terre a la Robuchon.
-Meticulous measurement and knowledge of your system. You want to be able to accurately predict that if you put X in you will get Y out. When you can brew an identical beer and have every single data point (first runnings, last runnings, mash temp and pH, boiloff, preboil gravity, post boil gravity, and so on and so forth) be identical every time, you're finally getting to the "good brewer" point.
the greatest spiced beer in the world? a friend of his, from a brewery no less, told him it was the greatest beer ever brewed? I made an awesome video as a homage to the greatest brew master of all time. his original video was deleted along with the thread. but you can get the point from mine though.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDA9qvaJpF8
Let's at least talk about something with a modicum of objectivity to it - award winning beer.
What really creates award winning beer is it the recipe or the method? Curious!
Umm ok where did i say all that....i am not so scientific and yes you are somewhat over doing this arent you. ..this is home brew isnt it? I think you are a bully to. You dont know anything about me why i brew what i brew ... perhaps that would give you some perspective. ..im sorry if you dont think someone can make killer beer in a walmart tamale pot....imo somewhere along the line this is not the spirit of homebrew