Brewing 'to the comp'

I had the exact same experience with my English BarleyWine. Said it wasnt strong enough to be a barleywine yet it was 1.086 OG and 1.017 FG but was otherwise a great beer yet it scored very low for being out of style.

ahh the million dollar question. I wonder the same thing. obviously there is nothing to stop you from doing this, just as there is nothing to stop me from entering the 80/- I just brewed as a 60/- except ethics. it’s frustrating therefore that I might never be able to win with an actual 60/- without ‘cheating’ in this way.

So, to recap, we have 1 strategy for doing better in comps;
  1) brewing to the top end of the style guidlines or beyond and more so brewing to the top end of the whole category and ignoring the lower gravity sub categories.

what else ya got?

why i struggle with brewing to style
i think of the style guidelines as well, guidelines.  such that my current dark beer that is lagering is my take on a cross between a dunkel and a schwarzbeir.  would love to get honest assessments on what people think of it.  flavors, colors, aromas, and faulty flavors etc.  but not necessarily that it didn’t seem to hit a mark compared to something else.

There’s no such thing as cheating, unless you didn’t brew the beer  :slight_smile:

If you think you know what your target audience wants, why not cater to it?  Just remember that all judges are different, and you are no way guaranteed to win with a “bigger is better” approach.  Especially in the second round, where you might get more seasoned judges.

I agree that the “bigger is better” method of judging is common and problematic.  I brewed a mild at the top end of the gravity ranges and with a significant quantity of flavor hops, yet it was deemed “not malty or hoppy enough.”  I also had my APA called “malt forward with minimal hop flavor” when it had over five ounces of American variety hops added after 30 minutes and minimal character malts (5-gallon batch).  I just attribute this to palate fatigue from judging too many over-the-top beers, and maybe judges who forget they’re supposed to consider the style, not just their preferences for stronger flavors.

The good news is that sometimes the smaller beer wins.  I judged at this year’s Indian Peak Alers Competition.  My table judged light lagers, including American standard lagers up to Bohemian Pils.  There wasn’t really a bad beer in our flight, and yet the winner at our table was an American standard lager.  Even better, this beer went on to win best of show.  So it just goes to show an over the top beer won’t always come out on top.

I find the “judge doesn’t prefer that type of hop” result annoying.  i had my blond ale dinged because the judges didn’t like the hop selection.  The comments specifically told me to try a different hop next time.  I could understand if I was using an English hop in an American style or something, but that wasn’t the case.  The judge just seemed to not like it.  That kind of feedback does me no good since others like the flavor, including the judges that gave it a gold medal at another comp I sent it to.  LOL

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Shaking head in amazement.