So call it a "Season" Orstraylyan for Saison. yeast cultured from the belly button fluff of a shearer wearing a Jackie Howe singlet.Spiesy said:Don't know... Saison sounds pretty French to me
Aren't we making up a new style anyway?
I'm a bit behind in this thread, but I think the word you're looking for is "provenance". Providence means something completely different...or a town in Rhode Island, USA.Lord Raja Goomba I said:<snip>
Southern Oceans Ale? Southern Ocean Ale? Tasman Sea Ale? But then, S&W are on the Pacific Ocean - so are we going for providence of the beer, or providence of the hops?
<snip>
Must be a tablet typo.verysupple said::icon_offtopic:
I'm a bit behind in this thread, but I think the word you're looking for is "provenance". Providence means something completely different...or a town in Rhode Island, USA.
Completely off topic, but there's a small brewery out in Renmark (Woolshed brewery) that does a wattleseed dark ale and is quite nice indeed. Can be a little hit and miss, but when it's good it's a real nice drop./// said:I read thru, and seemed that much of the discussion was about a light Pale Ale that simply uses what was a new hop in dry hop. Unlike a beer like Barons (forgive me for mentioning them) Wattle Seed Ale ... or a take on a different theme ... Vienna Imperial Lager ... with belgo ale and lager yeast ...
So i'd ask the question about the use of a technique or a addition other than a new hop ...
Flame suit on ...
8.4 American Amber AleBTW, Amber Ales don't have a category under AABC either.
Thanks, when did that come in Andrew? Looking at a print out here now.....nada. 2010 guidelines printed 2012 has duseldorf Alt as 8.4.AndrewQLD said:8.4 American Amber Ale
Thus why this discussion is worth having (heck I think it is even for the fun of it! ).Bribie G said:The Australian version of the BJCP guidelines dropped the American Amber as it was considered that nobody was brewing it anymore. They were in the style guide in 2009 as I entered one. However they disappeared then reappeared a few years later, I think it might have been 2012.
It really doesn't matter and you're 100% correct any addition or subtraction of styles is highly unlikely to change the frequency of which they're brewed but it's a good conversationHBHB said:If I may add two worthless cents:
Does it really matter?
Outside of a competitive entry submitted for judging, brewers will always just make what beer style suits them. I mean who ever heard of something black as the ace of spades being classed as pale? ie Black Indian Pale Ale maybe - I'm missing something. What's next...a Black Belgian Witbier?
If at some stage, their beer doesn't sit within the style guidelines of BJCP or AABC, it doesn't detract from the said beer being gob smackingly delicious. If they want it judged then they can enter it into the specialty beer category and have the beer judged on it's own merits.
BTW, Amber Ales don't have a category under AABC either. (Correction, they do now for 2014, tks Andrew)
+1 (if that's what you young uns do; I don't get Gen A let alone Gen Y or anything in between)Nizmoose said:It really doesn't matter and you're 100% correct any addition or subtraction of styles is highly unlikely to change the frequency of which they're brewed but it's a good conversation
And I reckon a lot of Commons and cream ales are being brewed here because they're in the (American) guidelines.Blind Dog said:+1 (if that's what you young uns do; I don't get Gen A let alone Gen Y or anything in between)
And I just realized that I have to eat humble pie, climb a long ladder and hang myself from my own petard, as b***** me sideways but there is already a style with 1 commercial example; Ladies and gentleperkins I give you BJCP style 7B California common (aka Anchor Steam; they're scraping the barrel with the other 2 examples given in the 2008 guidelines).
No barrel aging? Prefer those ones ...mje1980 said:For years I've been wanting to put my chilli vanilla vegemite imperial stout pale lager saison in a comp. The way things are going, soon there might even be an Australian version of the style.
Enter your email address to join: