It was an AIPA.moodgett said:What style was that beer ?
Yeah - I try to CPBF my comp beers, but get terrible results. One beer has overall impression: "nice easy drink, no flaws, undercarbonation makes it hard to drink"barls said:could just of been poor translation to bottle. loss of carbonation will do that to it.
Actually, thinking about it, every entry I put in scored 3/3 for appearance. Not enough points to worry about, when flavour, worth 20, can be affected so much with carb levels, which goes towards the overall impression worth 10.moodgett said:Not in this comp but in others. I bottle so I bulk prime with cane sugar. Most beers i do are APA or AIPA. i aim for 2.4-2.5 vols and havnt ever had an issue with carb for feedback
just on that. Do you filter, fine or cold crash your beer at all?mckenry said:Actually, thinking about it, every entry I put in scored 3/3 for appearance. Not enough points to worry about, when flavour, worth 20, can be affected so much with carb levels, which goes towards the overall impression worth 10.
Something I hadnt considered before when preparing for competitions....
All three usually.moodgett said:just on that. Do you filter, fine or cold crash your beer at all?
Contentious indeed! Worth a test for me I suppose. Might do a half half of the same batch.moodgett said:I know this is a subject of contention. I dont do any of those ever. When i have fined cold crashed or tried to get clear wort i have found my beers to subsequently lack hop flavour and aroma compared to when i just tip it in
go for it mate just smash a whole batch inmckenry said:Contentious indeed! Worth a test for me I suppose. Might do a half half of the same batch.
cheers mate my APA landed about where i expected you scored it 36 and I wasnt unhappy with the result.MCHammo said:All my beers bar one were bottled from the keg. Carbonation seems to be all over the place given the feedback. My top scoring Ordinary Bitter was bottled from the keg just like the others. I've invested in a proper bottling gun now, so I should be able to avoid a few issues that came up and wasn't having in the keg prior to entering them (low carbonation and possible oxidation).
I'm betting that the confusing comment before (hard to look up on my phone) was from Matt on an IPA? It was his first time judging. He gave similarly vague feedback on my Aussie IPAs. At least every junior judge was paired with a recognised judge, so that you are still guaranteed some good feedback, and us juniors can learn quite a bit from the experience - both in judging others beers and our own.
It was only my second time judging too, and I tried to be constructive in my criticism. If you entered an APA, chances are that I (Andrew) judged your beer. I will say, that there were very few with good hop aroma, and quite a few with way too much crystal malt. Sometimes these little things can ruin a beer, and too low (or high) carbonation won't help either. A few of my own beers got hammered, but I did receive mostly (Matt) good, constructive, honest feedback.
I think the highest mark I gave was a 37, so not a bad effort at all!moodgett said:cheers mate my APA landed about where i expected you scored it 36 and I wasnt unhappy with the result.
haha even betterMCHammo said:I think the highest mark I gave was a 37, so not a bad effort at all!
Just a shame that my best bitter and ESB weren't quite so good! Attempting to fix up a few flaws with the Best Bitter tomorrow. I'm fairly sure it was mainly bottling/potential oxidation issues that let the BB down. Will need to see how the new bottle filling gun works out for the Castle Hill comp. Should have just enough time to squeeze in the best.boonchu said:MCHammo I judged the English Bitter, Best Bitter and ESB group and yours stood out above the rest. Barry's clone by Wit was a close second but most lacked hop and malt aroma
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