originally posted by Marc D:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
But this is just an itemized list of things you object to as spoof. It isn't an indication of the common terrain of spoof, so to speak, much less a definition. I'll settle for a common terrain, by the way. For instance, why are hop pellets OK, but not hop oil? Is it just tradition? Why is the tradition a good one? Is there something about the beerness of beer (since terroir doesn't seem to be the issue) that could at least be pointed too? Inquiring minds need to know.
Sorry for the delayed reply. Busy with work here.
Beer for me is the combination of 4 basic ingredients. Malted grain, yeast, hops and water.
All 4 should be in some sort of balance to make a good beer.
Of course some styles will emphasize the malt or hops, and this is fine.
Using other ingredients such as spices, fruit, different grains then malted barley all seems fine to me and still within parameters of what I think of as beer. For me the best Belgian style beers emphasize the byproducts of the yeast fermentation, ester and aldehyde flavors from the yeast. Added spices should be in the background and not the primary flavor. When these other ingredients become the feature flavor in the end product, I start to object. I guess this is more of my personal paradigm of how I think of beer and of course my personal tastes come into play.
Beer aged in new whiskey barrels tastes more like whiskey then beer to me, and therefore seems "spoofed". I don't care for this flavor in beer.
Lots of folks like a bourbon flavored beer, and these can be very well made with a lot of care and thought behind the recipe and process.
Hops are a key ingredient and I feel that beers using the distilled hop oil, just like using syrup of malt extract vs using the whole grains is probably going too far away from using the basic 4 ingredients, and to me approaches "spoof".