GABF – Are you prepared?

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With many of us attending GABF this year, it is always fun to join up with the crew at some point during the session. I prefer to attend with people that have goals, lists and knowledge of what to seek out at GABF (none of the skills I have for attending a beer festival). Keep alert to the discord to see when some of us might be leaving Arvada on the train to make it downtown. OTMP's favorite beer writer/member sent along this write up regarding his experience judging this year's GABF, some good and interesting thoughts. Cheers! See you all on Wednesday night for the meeting. 
-Sherlock  
GABF Insights 
by Ryan Pachmayer
I recently judged the Great American Beer Festival Competition for the very first time. Along with the World Beer Cup, these are some of the more sought after and prestigious competitions to judge in the beer world, not to mention compete in. The application requires several strong references and a reasonably extensive history of judging experience. The wait list is usually at least two years to get in.

I judged around 150 beers in seventeen categories over three days and roughly 24 hours of table judging. I was paired with judges from around the country, and even some international judges. Minnesota, California, Nevada, Spain, and of course some local Colorado judges.
Categories like Field Beer, Kellerbier/Zwickelbier, American Amber/Red Ale, Juicy or Hazy Pale, Dortmunder or German-Style Oktoberfest, Bohemian Pilsner, International Dark Lager and more.
I learned quite a bit judging the GABF, and I came away impressed, along with some newfound ideas and perspectives.
It Was a Marathon, Not a Sprint
First off, this was an exhausting endeavor. Other than a three hour work period on night two, I basically didn't do anything of value outside of judging over these three days. Many out of town judges will visit local destination breweries, and there are some organized group activities after judging (usually at local breweries), but I refrained from those.
Despite the heavy load, the palate held up. I felt like I could taste very well throughout the three days. The combination of plenty of water, short breaks between most flights and fairly bland lunches served to us (purposefully bland, I believe. I didn't hear other judges complaining about palate fatigue either. Plenty of the people I judged with have been evaluating beer for decades, and 75% of the judges had judged GABF before.
Expertise Was High
At the Kellerbier round, an older judge was reviewing the style guidelines before our beers came out. She remarked how she felt it was inaccurate that they allowed for some late hopping/dry hopping, the latter specifically, since the Germans don't dry hop. I chimed in, naming a couple of beers that I know are dry hopped in Germany, and from classic breweries too (like Augustiner Pils, a very subtle, light dry hop).
In the next few minutes, I learned that she lived in Bamberg for three years, working for Weyermann. Another judge at the table had lived about forty five minutes from there too. A third judge had visited multiple times and done a bike tour there. The fourth judge had also visited multiple times. These weren't novices, and I quickly thought that I'd have to make sure I am contributing something of value if I'm going to be in a discussion, otherwise maybe I should just ask questions and listen. Luckily, what I said was accurate, so I didn't make a fool of myself, but it just reminded me to be especially on point with my words here.
Not All Categories Are of the Same Quality
This may be obvious, but it was never more evident than when we judged that Kellerbier/Zwickel category. Kellerbier/Zwickel is basically unfiltered, fresh beer. This category allowed for ale and lager, in the German style (though Czech lagers were apparently allowed too). The problem is, entries need to be bottled and turned in 3-4 weeks prior to judging. This is fine for most beer styles, but for this style, which is usually served off the tank, from a barrel or a small keg, it's an impossible task. It would be like asking people to bottle their English cask ales and ship them over for judging. As a result, most beers didn't have that vibrant, unfiltered fresh bready, lightly estery type character. Most were completely clear. Those are not the attributes you'd expect from that style.
Categories Are Varied and Interesting
Most evaluations that I do use the BJCP style guidelines. They are a fantastic resource, and interesting to read if you're into beer, even if you're not a judge. I read them years before I became a judge, it got me interested in trying new styles, in understanding some of my favorites, and of course, in brewing new beers. For GABF and World Beer Cup, the Brewer's Association has its own guidelines. They're updated more frequently and I think they account for some market realities that the BJCP may not always capture. For example, I believe they acknowledged hazy IPAs before the BJCP did, as these beers were quickly becoming an important part of the market share and brewing industry in general.
There are some interesting distinctions, like “American Oktoberfest” versus German style. They have both in the BA guidelines. American basically allows slightly more hopping. Not a high amount of hops, but slightly more. I actually appreciate this. Many people who go to Germany, many who love the festbiers of Germany, complain or point out that many American breweries hop higher. I'm one of those people, and sometimes lost in those observations, is that an Oktoberfest that is 10-20% hoppier or more bitter than a German one can be delicious. Using some light Cascade hops or Sterling or Mount Hood can totally result in a quality beer (Sierra Nevada uses 2 row and cascade hops in its oktoberfest, for example). So why not acknowledge that a large group of breweries in America are doing it in a slightly different way, and separate out a category for that? It still allows the traditional examples to go into the German-style category. Win-win to me, and very practical.
Getting Out of the Box
Before I got into beer writing, I was probably guilty of visiting too few breweries in recent years. I mean, I know what I like, and despite enjoying virtually every beer style when done a certain way, I could count on one hand the number of breweries I'd visit regularly. I'd go to Bierstadt the most, Helles and Pils alone were enough to keep me interested for life, those are fantastic, delicious beers. Anything else made there was just a bonus. The improved food over the years was another bonus. My logic was, “hey, beer isn't free, why waste time drinking a beer that is almost certainly not as good as the places I regularly visit?”
I don't completely dismiss that line of thinking anymore, but I've changed a bit. I appreciate the ambiance of a space a little bit more now, and I also have grown better at seeking information and ultimately finding beers that other breweries do very well too, particularly from breweries that don't brew one general style of beer. Maybe the IPA is just OK, but what about the dry stout? 
Brewing knowledge has increased and become so much more accessible over the last five to ten years. There are more trained brewers coming out of certified programs, stateside and abroad, every single year. It's an industry where you would rarely get worse at your craft, so it makes sense that so many have gotten better, especially with the emphasis on boutique ingredients, often from local suppliers. Those companies wouldn't exist if there wasn't a strong interest in them, both from customers and producers alike.
In my newfound wider travels, I've found beers like a cold IPA from New Terrain that was as good as any I've had from Westbound & Down. An altbier from Little Dry Creek that would've been in my top three in Dusseldorf. A Czech lager from Seedstock that would fit right in at Wild Provisions or Cohesion. I could triple the size of this paragraph. Yes, there have been more “OK” beers, but few that I didn't finish or had to struggle to drink. But the quality is higher than ever before, and the beers at this competition just reinforced that. Yes, there were plenty of flawed beers (oxidation most, pointing towards packaging as an inherent skill in entering competitions like GABF), but by the final rounds, you often had a half a dozen beers in front of you that you'd really enjoy a full pint of. Deciding between those half dozen or more beers, picking out the three medal winners, was a challenge for the usual five-person team of judges for each category, but a ton of fun.
Back to the point, going through all these categories, drinking some of the best commercial examples in the country against each other, it really made me feel that I should seek out some better examples of styles I don't often drink. American Wheat ale is a great example. Breckenridge has won medals with its Agave Wheat in this category before. That's a beer I don't really care for. The style is usually super light, fairly bland, low bittering and hops, and historically in this country it has been a style made for people who just want bud/miller/coors type beers. A slot on a tap list to be filled in, “We have to have that for people who are here that don't like beer.”
Luckily, options for non beer drinkers at breweries is wider than ever and people who don't like beer don't need to settle for a light, bland beer. American Wheat isn't found on every tap list any longer. But who is still making it and who is making it with the attention, care and thoughtfulness that many of the top breweries are putting into their pilsners, IPAs and barleywines? That's a question I seek to answer.
Read the style guidelines for American Wheat, read the upper limits of ABV, IBUs and color (5.6%, 35 IBUs and 7 SRM respectively). Understand that you can do a substyle, a dark American wheat (5.6%, 25 IBUs and 22 SRM upper limits). Use at least 30% malted wheat. You can have a medium hop bitterness, a low to medium hop character, some light fruity esters from the ale yeast (light, subtle, as in blonde or amber ales). A low to medium body, clean, with some soft bready type grainy flavor in there, perhaps from the wheat, perhaps from some Vienna you decided to put in there. That could be a damn good beer. Who is making beers like this in the American Wheat category? I don't know, but I aim to find out, and maybe brew one myself as well.
Getting More Out of the Box
Judging the rye category sort of opened my eyes again to the possibility of hybrid beers. When I started brewing, I would do a lot of experimental things. Fifteen years ago a friend and I made an earl grey tea beer. It was delicious, people loved it. Basically a light American pale ale, but with added earl grey tea. Of course, over the next decade, beers like that went from almost unheard of to typical. Every damn ingredient has been put into a beer, often for suspicious reasons (like attention/hype/”because we can!!!”). I grew tired of this stuff. While there are new things you can do with beer, nothing really feels “new.” Few things will inspire me to say “wow.” I might laugh when you bring up a mustard beer, an IPA aged in hot sauce barrels, or I might even roll my eyes when you tell me about a beer fermented with yeast from a brewer's beard. But I won't be surprised.
Lost in all this “race to do everything to every type of beer,” is the potential value in altering a small number of ingredients in a beer. Of adding something uncommon to a beer style, but something that might fit in, something of value. The rye category reminded me of this notion. We judged some amazing rye beers. Roggenbier (light German rye ales with hefeweizen yeast) were in this category, a historic German style that has all but disappeared. But there were beers like a brown porter with rye, a rotbier with rye (a German red ale, historically from Nuremberg, had almost gone extinct, but now a handful of Nuremberg-area breweries make it, among others in the world). A California common with rye. These were some of my favorite types of rye beers that we judged in the finals.
As I was drinking these, the rye added a very subtle, slightly spicy, sometimes earthy character to these beers. A delicious and welcomed dimension to the best of this category. And I thought, why not? Why not purposefully add a subtle ingredient to a beer? This is less of a flavor impact than a white wine barrel might have a Belgian tripel, less of an impact than a very tiny dry hop and perhaps a slightly higher malt character would have on a German Pilsner (turning it into what is referred to as a classic Italian Pilsner these days, NOT the overly dry hopped, but often delicious versions that plenty of brewers call Italian Pils).
The use of new ingredients and methods have always allowed for variations, and even clear improvements, and new beers were born from this. At some point all pale ale was just called that. Then it was sectioned out to distinct types (American and English first). The Oktoberfest example that I mentioned earlier reminds me of this too. I used to think the Germans were regimented when it came to style, everything was very specific and had hard rules. Not at all. Maybe Munich area breweries, but even there, it's more that they're similar, than any overarching guide that forces them to call beers certain things. The slightly higher hopped American Oktoberfests that I talked about? They're making some higher hopped beers of that style in Franconia now. A local tour guide over there even told me they've made a comeback in recent years. And like I said to the far more experienced-in-German judge at the table: Plenty of historical German breweries toss a kiss of hops late into the kettle or into the dry hop. Hell, the lager koelschips historically often had hops tossed into them. They'd add some soft, herbal hop flavors to the beer, and also help to filter the beer as they started to drain the koelschip into the fermenter.
Using a subtle ingredient in an otherwise classic style of beer, it should be welcomed if it is well integrated. And don't lose the forest for the trees: No classification, history or style matters one bit if the beer tastes good. And those rye beers tasted great.
So as you're on the floor of GABF this month, thinking about what to drink next, maybe try something new. Try something different. Perhaps not a pickle beer (though, I'm almost embarrassed to admit I evaluated a fantastic one during judging), but something classic with a slight, but sensible twist. You might be surprised at what you find.
Cheers!

OTMP – September Meeting 9/20/23 – August Meeting Recap

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 September Club Update: 
As the leaves change color here soon and the cool breeze of autumn begins to set in, homebrewers eagerly anticipate the arrival of fall. This season brings with it a cornucopia of beer styles that mirror the changing seasons. From malty and spiced brews to pumpkin-infused delights, fall beers offer a contrast to lighter, more easy drinking beers from the summer. Here we'll take a journey through some of the most beloved and iconic fall beer styles, each with its unique characteristics and the perfect accompaniment to the crisp autumn air. Hopefully this writing will get you thinking about what Fall beer you might brew up next, I am certainly excited about the coming cool weather and new fall homebrews.  

Märzen/Oktoberfest
Classic Märzen and Oktoberfest beers that are synonymous with autumn, thanks to Munich's legendary Oktoberfest celebration. These lagers are characterized by their beautiful amber color, balanced maltiness, and a touch of sweetness. They offer a smooth and drinkable profile with a hint of toasted bread and a clean finish. These beers are perfect for celebrating the changing seasons and pair wonderfully with traditional fall fare like sausages and pretzels.
Pumpkin Ales
One of the most iconic fall beer styles (for some), pumpkin ales, brings a taste of the fall harvest season to your glass. Homebrewers get creative with these beers, infusing them with real pumpkin, and spices like cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove, and a touch of sweetness. The result is a spicy, aromatic brew with a pumpkin pie-like quality. Pumpkin ales are perfect for sipping around the fire or enjoying with others during fall celebrations.
Spiced Beers
As noted above Fall is the season for spices, and many homebrewers take inspiration from the kitchen when crafting their fall beers; think of all the complex flavors of Thanksgiving's savory flavors, sweets and treats. Spiced ales often feature ingredients like cinnamon, ginger, allspice, and cloves as well all the spices you can find in Mulled wine; anise, maple syrup, brandy and orange. The spice profile can create a warming, comforting flavor that makes spiced beers the ideal choice for those brisk autumn evenings.
Brown Ales
Brown ales, with their rich and malty character, are another staple of the fall beer scene. These beers come in many other notable sub-styles, from English brown ales with nutty undertones to American brown ales with a more pronounced hop presence. Even more rare brown ale types like Oud Bruin, Smoked Brown, and Belgian Brown Ale also fit into this category. The common thread is their deep toasty, caramel-like flavors, making them a great choice for those seeking a comforting, malt-forward brew as the days get shorter and cooler.
Harvest Ales / Fresh Hopped Beers / Seasonals
Harvest ales are brewed with freshly harvested hops, grain or other fresh adjuncts. These beers often have a pronounced hoppy character and a vibrant, earthy quality, evoking the spirit of the season. Wet hop beers, which use freshly harvested hops without drying, giving them a unique, grassy aroma that hop heads can appreciate. These beers are easy to produce this time of year if you happen to have some hop bines growing in your yard. 
Dark Lagers and Porters
As fall darker beer styles come into their own in the coming months. Dark lagers and porters offer complex flavors like roasted, toffee, chocolate, and coffee notes, providing a cozy and robust drinking experience. These beers are perfect for sipping by the fireside, and they pair wonderfully with hearty stews and roasts. Styles like Sweet Stout, Imperial Stout, Belgian Double, Oatmeal Stout and Baltic Porter come to mind for beers that can make amazing seasonal beers. 


Ever since I started home brewing Fall has always been one of my favorite times to brew. With cooler nights and better brewing conditions, Fall is where we see all the variations of beer come to life. With so much room for interpretation of style and remixes on old favorites Fall beers are wide open to a palette of colors  from Amber to toasty dark beers and flavors that are simple to complex. I am eagerly anticipating some amazing brew days coming from all members of OTMP and of course to be shared in future meetings. 


Five Star Chemical Ordering:
The order will be placed this month, please fill out the form ASAP. It looks likely that we will be ordering a case of star-san and a case of sani-clean as well as a huge bucket of PBW to break down for brewers by the pound. 
You can check out the product offerings here and the product guide hereIf you have interest in getting in on a bulk purchase fill out this form to let us know your product interest and quantities. The club will hold spare inventory to continue to sell off over time at cost, thus spreading the savings for all. You can check in on the requests for orders here.

Club Nominations for OTMP Board Members:
Please take a moment to complete the ballot for elected officers for the 2023-2024 meetings. Voting will close the day of the September meeting where officers will be announced. 

AHA Membership:
As many of us are members of the AHA we get benefits from being members, from discounts, to early ticket releases we all now have another perk. OTMP is now a registered supporter of the AHA; meaning that if you use the discount code OTMP at checkout you will receive $5 off an annual membership as well as the club will be given $5. Feel free to share with anyone looking to join the AHA. This can be an easy way for those of us that annually renew to also roll some extra cash back to the club. 
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Tasting Glasses:
New glassware has started to be handed out, if you missed last month we will have the glassware at the September meeting. You can also reach out to Evan Sherlock if you want to pick yours up at any point. 
Competitive Brewing: 
Anyone looking to enter into the competition we could get a group of us to submit together. I am sure there are a few members that would be able to rank rather high in competition, if we join together we can also complete drop offs together. We can discuss this more at the next meeting. If any of us is interested in getting into the pro-am for next year this would be a great start. 

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Time to brew it up.
 The recipe has been picked, now we just need to get all of it brewed up. We are looking for a time in mid-January to complete the filling of the barrel. This should give us all plenty of time to brew it up and have it ready in 3 months. Each brewer will only need to brew up a 5 gallon batch, as we have 11 participants. If you were one of the people that would like to have a brew day with another brewer we can start arranging that at the next meeting. I for one would love to host another brewer or two as I can't ferment under 16 gallons in my fermenter, that is unless I buy another fermenter before this brew day. 
Recipe:
Participants:
Newsletter Contributions:
Open to anyone willing to write up anything related to the topic of brewing. We are looking for people that are willing to share brocess information, tasting guidelines, recipe formulation or anything related to brewing experiences. Just submit before the end of each month to be included in the next month's newsletter. Just send them over to the club email. 
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September Meeting Info:

Event Invite for Calendar


Where: 

Location:

6391 Brooks Drive Arvada CO 80004

Date:

9-20-23

Time:

7:00 – Beer tastings

Notes:

In good weather we will be out in the backyard, if weather is an issue we will be in the basement. 


RSVP:

Register Beers and RSVP to the meeting here. 


View registered beers here. 

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August Meeting Recap:

Another amazing meeting in West Arvada hosted a club favorite Chuck. Many amazing beers and even new fun shirts thanks to Dennis. Ending ending the night with 5 beers coming in at 10+% made for a real treat. 

Attendants: See attached notes in the Google Sheets

Meeting Recap / Beers:

Future Meeting Locations: (If you can offer a location for a future slot please reach out):

As a club that relies on member assistance having meeting locations for the club is necessary, if you have the ability in warm weather or inside for colder months please check below to see if you can host for one month. Participation in hosting one club event a year will be credited to one year of annual dues each September. 

October 2023 – Jeff and Sarah Aikman's Garage of 1000 Beers (Central Arvada)

November 2023 – Jim's Bier Barn (East Arvada)

December 2023 – Jim's Bier Barn (East Arvada)

January 2024 – Charles Basement Tap Room (Central Arvada)

February 2024 – Cole's Personal Cooperstown Basement Bar (Central Arvada)

March (2024) – Dennis' House of Foam (West Arvada)    

April (2024) –  Chuck's Under the Stairs Speakeasy (West Arvada)   

May (2024) – Cody's Independence Street Brewery (Central Arvada) 

June (2024) –  Sherlocks Brewery and Ale House (Central Arvada)

July (2024) – open

August (2024) – Chuck's Under the Stairs Speakeasy (West Arvada)

September (2024) – Dave's Commercial Club House (Westminster)