According to the BJCP, yes:jward wrote:Should an Irish Red Ale be dry and lack estery fruitiness?
Medium-dry to dry finish. Clean and smooth (lager versions can be very smooth). No esters.
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According to the BJCP, yes:jward wrote:Should an Irish Red Ale be dry and lack estery fruitiness?
That's how I feel about the competitions most of the time. I brew what I like, not for competition. I am usually happy with my score sheets if they provide constructive feedback and don't find any real flaws in my beer. If I brewed to the extreme end of the style guidelines, I may do better in competition, but fewer people would enjoy drinking my beer. You gotta give the people what they want.brahn wrote:Yea, it's too bad that it doesn't neatly fit into what judges are expecting. I agree that it's more of an American Red than Irish, but it wouldn't surprise me if it scores better in the Irish category simply because of the judge's expectations of an American Amber/Red. That's one very broad category, and typically I think you'll see the bigger, more aggressive, beers do better there.
I vote for brewing what you like and saying to hell with the styles.
I agree as well. Towards the end of last year and so far this year I just haven't been all that eager to compete. I haven't really tried to bottle anything and I'm not sure I will this year.BrewMasterBrad wrote:That's how I feel about the competitions most of the time. I brew what I like, not for competition. I am usually happy with my score sheets if they provide constructive feedback and don't find any real flaws in my beer. If I brewed to the extreme end of the style guidelines, I may do better in competition, but fewer people would enjoy drinking my beer. You gotta give the people what they want.brahn wrote:Yea, it's too bad that it doesn't neatly fit into what judges are expecting. I agree that it's more of an American Red than Irish, but it wouldn't surprise me if it scores better in the Irish category simply because of the judge's expectations of an American Amber/Red. That's one very broad category, and typically I think you'll see the bigger, more aggressive, beers do better there.
I vote for brewing what you like and saying to hell with the styles.