Trough Lolly
"Drink, Feck, Arse, Girls"!
- Joined
- 21/8/03
- Messages
- 1,692
- Reaction score
- 7
Of course they can! And we often do, whether we knowingly do it or not!You don't think a brewer has the right to override this?
Well, I'd be more than happy to drink your fine brew, but to be honest, it's not a matter of enforceability - it's as I said in my earlier post...If I ran a microbrewery, and made a new brew which was an authentic English bitter in every respect, except that I chose to use a lager yeast - and if I decided to market this beer as 'Wortgames Peculiar Pommy Ale, brewed clean for summer drinking' - then I should be 'wrong' and prevented from calling it that?
((Emphasis added)) The actual strain of yeast should not be used as the sole determinant but it does give brewers and especially those who want to make commercial quantities of a beer over and over, a start in being able to consistently reproduce their beer. Sure, that may not be important to us homebrewers, but I do keep records of every beer I've made since 1995 and I think it would be remiss of me not to note which yeast strain I used....to identify broad categories of beer based on yeast is a pretty good starting point.
Then you have a perfectly acceptable beer that's neither a pure lager or ale! And you have absolutely every right to call it what you want and determine how you make it...Where you may have a problem is trying to pass it off as a pure lager in a BJCP or similar comp???? But that doesn't matter a jot if you don't put it in a comp, does it!What if I add both ale AND lager yeast?
I can't disagree with you there - and the day we stop experimenting will be a very sad day...but I still maintain, the type of yeast you use to ferment your wort is a good starting point in trying to classify the beer as either a lager or ale...if you want to that.IMO a brewer is (and should be) entitled to use whatever ingredients he wants, to make whatever style of beer he wants, and to call the result whatever he wants. In most cases it isn't an issue of course, as the brewer would generally agree with the yeast classification - but I could see potential situations where a creative brewer might buck the trend and deliberately use a 'wrong' yeast for some reason, and I don't like the idea that certain things should be defined for him externally by hard and fast rules.
Brewer first, then yeast strain. I reckon.
Otherwise, brew, drink, and enjoy!
Cheers,
TL