Have been thinking about a way to define what is eligible for armature competition and what isnt, how about:
Beer on which no excise is charged.
That rules out anything made on a commercial system including I believe BOP where a concessional rate of excise is levied, wort from a commercial brewery and most of the other issues raised are covered by this definition.
It leaves in Kits, Extract, FWK and naturally enough All Grain.
MHB
Good to see such an active discussion - where were all you guys when the rule was developed a few years ago ?
Firstly, I need to declare my position as I was the NSW deleate when rule "D3. Amateur Brews" was formulated. It came about because a NSW professional brewer was denied entry into the Nationals due the the unspoken definition of amateur. I provoked the discussion by seeking to define what a 'Professional Brewer' was.
- If I own a brewing company am I considered to be 'in the trade' ?
- What if I own shares in Fosters ?
- What if I drive a fork lift at XXXX and get to chat to the brewers over lunch ?
- What if I dig out the mashtun at Murray's ?
- What if I am a retired footballer that sells Tooheys beer to pubs ?
- What if I am Chuck Hann ?
These are all different aspects of being a 'professional' in the brewing industry. At the time I was branded a troublemaker and responsible for all evils including global warming !!!!! The level of personal abuse that I received from the 'AABA Mafia' was both astounding and shocking.
But one good thing about being an old ******* was that you both don't care about critisism and that you don't hear it (or can't read it without your glasses).
I was responsible for the developing the current wording of parragraph "D3. Amateur Brews:, but as I had pointed out during the ensuing discussions I disagreed with the way that it was finally worded (ie I didn't thgink that it went far enough in clarifying the situation). So, I voted against it, resigned from the AABA committee and promptly took my bat and ball (or tasting glass and BJCP style guidelines) and started my own competition held in association with the Bitter & Twisted competition.
This comp allows entries from 'all brewers whatsoever, without restriction' and only requires that the beer 'be not fermented on licensed premises and must be entered under the name of the brewer(s). This includes 'all beers not made as a commercial beer regardless of where the wort was made ie at home, in a brewshop, at BOP or obtained from a commercial brewery as a Beer Kit or Wort Pack'. Obviously this works on trust and depends on the ethics of the individuals concerned.
So this would allow Chuck Hann to take some wort home and as ong as he fermented, bottled and conditioned it at home and entered it under his own name - then it will be allowed in our NSW comps. But as this sort of 'dangerous behaviour' is frowned upon by the Amature establishment our Mr Hann is not able to enter his own beer into a state or national comp. This is why we sponsor all winners to enter the Nationals in the USA ie our 'best' takes on the best in the USA.
Now I can hear all the gasps of horror as I type this, so please let me inject some reality into the discussion. I have not entered the Nationals since 2000 and probably 2006 was the last time I entered the state comp. Despite brewing for around 30 years (at home) and commercially for a few years (developing and making 'award winning' fresh wort packs) I no longer consider myself an amateur (despite not earning a living from brewing). Brewing more than ten thousand litres of wort packs on commercial equipment, attending Siebel tast training sessions, owning a brewing libray worth about $2,000 and tasting thousands of beers in the USA I prefer to be involved in comps as an organiser and not participant. I also simply don't have time to enter comps.
I know many professional brewers (however that is defined) that are in the same boat and no longer enter comps (een though they would be entitled to do so under the AABA rules). Time is the biggest factor, but there is also the fact that if they are busy brewing great beers during the day they don't feel the need to brew at home or enter comps.
Furthermore, any 'run of the mill' commercial beers usually score poorly against well made amature beers. We always include a commercial calibration beer at the start of each judging session and mainstream beers are lucky to score 30/50. True craft beers from Potters, Murray's or Littles are standouts scoring 40-42.
We all know that mainstream beer are made for the massess who don't really like the flavour of beer, and I have seen many who 'brew for their living' struggle with infections, poor fermentation performance or inadequate recipe development. So amateur brewers have nothing to fear. Most of you will beat the pro's or at the very least learn something from them.
So, as has been expressed many times in this and the other threads - if you don't like the current AABC rules, discuss this with your state AABA delagates. If you still don't get the answer you want, either start or join another organisation that can support your view.
There is still plenty of scope for evolution in our competition scene.
Dave