darlacat
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2018
- Messages
- 121
- Reaction score
- 59
Anyone else feel fatigued by the saturation of NEIPA on the market at the moment? Aside from a handful of standout beers, the majority of beers in this style tend to be underhwelming, or downright bad: I've had many that have that horrible 'hop burn' character, or are unfinished products - even from big name and revered breweries (a friend once even had, quite literally, a can full of yeast sediment and trub). Even at its best, the style can be quite cloying and filling due to the mouthfeel and 'juice'/smoothie character - like thickened Rubicon at times. It seems to defeat the essence of beer to me - a social drink - and has now become the style most commonly associated with 'IPA'.
While the style has developed some interesting hop techniques and yeast choices, the beers are, overall, quite homogeneous - there really is little variety despite the overwhelming wealth of choice on the shelves. A lot of the demand also seems to be driven by Instagram and Untapped - the can art, implications of uniqueness, the photogeneity of opaque beer in fancy tumbler glassware (or 'vaseware'... ).
Anyone feel the same? Or am I simply wrong/missing out on the good stuff?
While the style has developed some interesting hop techniques and yeast choices, the beers are, overall, quite homogeneous - there really is little variety despite the overwhelming wealth of choice on the shelves. A lot of the demand also seems to be driven by Instagram and Untapped - the can art, implications of uniqueness, the photogeneity of opaque beer in fancy tumbler glassware (or 'vaseware'... ).
Anyone feel the same? Or am I simply wrong/missing out on the good stuff?