Overall harmony and drinkability are the keys to presenting a well-made specialty beer. The distinctive nature of the stated specialty ingredients/methods should complement the original style (if declared) and not totally overwhelm it. The brewer should recognize that some combinations of base beer styles and ingredients or techniques work well together while others do not make palatable combinations. . . The base style may be a classic style (i.e., a named subcategory from these Style Guidelines) or a broader characterization (e.g., "Porter" or "Brown Ale"). If a base style is declared, the style should be recognizable. The beer should be judged by how well the special ingredient or process complements, enhances, and harmonizes with the underlying style.The BJCP does not allow the full textual descriptions to be included in other publishings, go to Specialty Beer on their site for details.
OG: Unspecified
FG: Unspecified
Alcohol: Unspecified
IBU: Unspecified
Color: Unspecified
CO2: Unspecified
OG | FG | Alcohol | IBU | Color | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unspecified | Unspecified | Unspecified | Unspecified | Unspecified | Unspecified |