Dorst
Well-Known Member
It's been a while since my last post on this forum; but still brewing ;-) I wanted to share a competition idea inspired by Brülosophy's Short & Shoddy series (link) in our homebrew group that is turning out to be great fun. Perhaps it can inspire some other homebrew groups that are looking for ideas?
The basic idea: Competition entries need to be brewed after our May meeting; and will be drank during our June meeting. So grain to glass within a month - which already puts the pressure on quite a bit.
We want to encourage short & shoddy corner cutting, so decided to award a multiplier to your competition score based on corners cut & self imposed difficulty. Anyone can brew a kveik hazy IPA or weizen within a month; but what about a lager or imperial beer?
These are the process criteria we will score the entries on:
Next part of the competition is to establish if the beer is any good, and we will use regular BJCP guidelines to score the beer. An entry must choose the style of entry from the BJCP guidelines (for example 3C. Czech Amber Lager) and will be scored by those standards by participants. 50 points are divided between Aroma, Appearance, Flavour, Mouthfeel, and Overall impressions, as is pretty standard.
S&S multiplier x BJCP score = final score.
By balancing process and quality we want to create an incentive to cut corners. But when you cut too many corners you might end up with a bad beer. To win this competition a participant will need to find the perfect balance between corner cutting and quality. Or you could just brew a great quality weizen and hope that all the corner cutting by others will lead to very poor beers - and still claim victory.
People have been super enthusiastic in our homebrew group with sharing photos. I'm super curious to taste all of these beers. It will be an interesting tasting indeed.
The basic idea: Competition entries need to be brewed after our May meeting; and will be drank during our June meeting. So grain to glass within a month - which already puts the pressure on quite a bit.
We want to encourage short & shoddy corner cutting, so decided to award a multiplier to your competition score based on corners cut & self imposed difficulty. Anyone can brew a kveik hazy IPA or weizen within a month; but what about a lager or imperial beer?
These are the process criteria we will score the entries on:
- How difficult is it to brew this style within a month?
- How S&S was the mash?
- How S&S was the boil? (if any boil at all)
- How S&S was the fermentation? (compared to the normal fermentation time)
- And a bonus point system to award self imposed restrictions/shortcuts etc. This way we can award creative shortcuts but also even out the level the playing field a bit for those that can only bottle condition vs force carbonation etc.
Next part of the competition is to establish if the beer is any good, and we will use regular BJCP guidelines to score the beer. An entry must choose the style of entry from the BJCP guidelines (for example 3C. Czech Amber Lager) and will be scored by those standards by participants. 50 points are divided between Aroma, Appearance, Flavour, Mouthfeel, and Overall impressions, as is pretty standard.
S&S multiplier x BJCP score = final score.
By balancing process and quality we want to create an incentive to cut corners. But when you cut too many corners you might end up with a bad beer. To win this competition a participant will need to find the perfect balance between corner cutting and quality. Or you could just brew a great quality weizen and hope that all the corner cutting by others will lead to very poor beers - and still claim victory.
People have been super enthusiastic in our homebrew group with sharing photos. I'm super curious to taste all of these beers. It will be an interesting tasting indeed.