Author Archives: EW

Recap: QUAFF Strong Ale Challenge

After a very long hiatus, the QUAFF Strong Ale Competition has returned and hosted at The Lost Abbey.  This is a BJCP qualified event, which means not only can you obtain points toward your own rank, but any winners of the competition will be eligible to enter GABF as a Pro-Am if, of course, they can find a pro-brewer willing to make their beer on a commercial scale.

As a club, always arrive early, even though there is a competition staff, they always need help.  Many hands make light work, so arrive early and ask where you can pitch in, this will ensure the event starts on time and runs well.  The tasting room floor of a brewery was a new location to judge beers, but being a seasoned veteran of judging, you simply tune out the noise and get down to business.  Here’s a pro-tip: if you’re interested in winning awards, make a special effort to enter competitions with a small number of  entries.  The odds of your winning will increase dramatically if you’re not competing against 80 to 100 other beers (say IPA). 

My judging partners for the event were Cole Davisson and Liz Chism and we were assigned the Strong Ale catagory 19 with one entry from Strong Scotch Ale cat 9E.  To our absolute delight, the beers were all very well made and showing few signs of brewing errors, for the most part.  Having judged for the past 3 years, there has been a dramatic increase in the quality of homebrew.  The beer revolution is certainly on at all levels and with quality going up, competitions will become much more difficult.  Just because your beer didn’t place doesn’t mean it wasn’t bad, but on that day and at that time with all the little variables considered, it just wasn’t the best beer put before the judges.

Palate fatigue is a problem which both the competition committee and judges have to address.  The committee must insure you’re not sitting down to a flight that is too large and judges need to monitor their intake to avoid burning out their palate.  Which means, small sips and a detailed study of all the flavors per sip, trying to reduce the amount of time each sample has to make sure the last beer can be judged as well as the first beer.  It’s a very fine line of how much you need to consume and for each judge it’s different.  Practice and repeat judging sessions will help you tune in your ability.  This is also the very reason to advance within the BJCP you need judging points.  Nothing beats real world experience.

Being a judge, you never know what catagory you may be assigned to.  Sure you’ve studied and taken the tasting and/or written exam, but none of us drinks from the entire style regularly enough to always be spot on.  Well at least me anyway, I can’t speak for everyone.  One thing I do when I get my assignment is if I’m not as familiar with the category, for the 2 days before the event, I’ll go snag singles from the classic examples and have 2 a night while reading over the style description.  This allows me to re-familiarize myself with the style and the range within the style.  Thus when I sit down to judge it’s fresh in my memory of what I should be looking for and also detect what shouldn’t be there.

In all the event was fun, judges and stewards were given wrist bands for free samples after the event, which was an added bonus and we were served lunch as well.  Given the flights were small, the event progressed quickly and smoothly.  I had a great time and this was another really well run event.  I can’t help but think that QUAFF ought to host a competition strictly limited to Cat 14: IPA, given it’s popularity.

QUAFF Strong Ale Challenge Results

Larry Stein took a stop motion film of the competition, and yes, we do judge this fast!

http://youtu.be/u-QmvZzEV5o

Cheers!
EW

Categories : Competitions

Studying for BJCP Beer Judging Examination

Hello QUAFFers,

Having just taken the tasting portion of the BJCP exam I thought I’d put down a few thoughts to help those in the future who want to study and advance within the BJCP world of judging.  After completing the new 200 Q’s/ 60 minutes online entry exam, you’ll want to sign up for the tasting exam right away.  Why?  Because the list is very long and the test is given infrequently. 

I believe it’s about once a year in San Diego.  Hopefully, when the graders have caught up, the exam size and frequency will increase.  You’ll also need 3 to 4 months to prepare for the exam.  Which sounds entirely crazy, but if you choose to do it once a week, it will take that long to get through all the styles. 

Our studying for this most recent exam was two fold: Travis ran a special weekly class to help us prepare for the exam.  Beer review, test mechanics (grading, focus etc…) and practice judging and a practice exam.  The other was 6 to 7  of us met weekly on Wednesdays to supplement Travis’ course with more focused study on beer subcategories.  We’d pick a main cat and attempt to find 2 classic examples of each sub-cat and taste them side-by-side. 
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Categories : Competitions

Smokey and the Brewer

A long way to go…

Every once in a great while, a great idea is born.  Most of the time, those ideas die on the vine, but…occasionally they bear fruit.  A few springs ago I was up alone having a few beers and chatting with my friend George in Portland.  He was telling me that after a year off, the Bill & Bill’s Brewfest was going to take place.  George (Bill) and Jared (Bill) are a few homebrewers with big dreams of going pro.  To build a groundswell of support, they’d been brewing like mad and each summer host a beerfest in their backyard, charged a cover, provided food and live music.  I told him I should drive some beer up and be a guest brewer, he replied “You totally should.”  We left it at that and hung up.

A week later this idea was festering, like a bunch of drunk gummi bears were gnawing on my brain.  If the Bandit and Snowman could go fetch 400 cases of beer in Texarkana and get back in 28hrs, why couldn’t I haul a bunch of kegs to Portlandia and back?  I looked at my keg inventory and the calendar.  I came up with a brew schedule and enlisted two friends to make the drive.  My roommate Jacob and my buddy Brian, then got to work.  I txt’ed George, “Get ready, we’re making this happen!”
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Categories : Beer Travels

Motorizing your Mill

A big advantage of having your own mill at home is you can mill the grain on demand, stock certain grains that the local HBM doesn’t carry, you can set the gap as you’d like, vs. being a the mercy of the store’s mill and it’s kinda cool.
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Categories : DIY

Converting a Mini-Fridge

There are 2 reasons you’d want to convert a mini-fridge:

1) turn it into a kegerator
2) turn it into a temp-controlled fermenter

In either case finding a refrigerator only (no freezer) is the easiest option.  Bending and moving a freezer inside a dorm fridge is not something I’ll cover.  If going the kegerator route the one thing you need to do to serve 2 corny kegs is to drill the top, make sure you don’t drill through the back 1/3 of the top as there is 1 coolant line for Sanyo/Kenmore brands.

 
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Categories : DIY

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