How to be a better beer taster - 10 tips! | The Craft Beer Channel

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 79

  • @TheCraftBeerChannel
    @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +9

    Hey beer geeks! Get the book Beer School right here: (amzn.to/3lqF0kd) and hit us up below with your tips and lightbulb moments!

    • @muzgash
      @muzgash 4 месяца назад

      A geek is also a "carnival performer often billed as a wild man whose act usually includes biting the head off a live chicken or snake". Even though we use this word differently now it's weird to think where it originates from, hence I prefer the word "nerd" that doesn't have that weird history.

  • @skullboy1234
    @skullboy1234 2 года назад +20

    The last tip is so important. Whenever i host a tasting i always let the guests talk within each other whilst i walk around and listen to what they're saying. Afterwards i gather the most interesting comments and share them with the rest of the group, often making someone agree and evaluate further on their previous thoughts. If i get a "hint of wet socks" comment from anyone i get so happy because that means there is someone there who hasn't fallen into the cliches of beer tasting yet, and those are the most interesting and genuine thoughts someone can have for beer

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +5

      Totally agree - so many times in tastings I run the audience come up with something I've never considered before that has changed the way I think about a beer or style.

  • @Dcalzaretta
    @Dcalzaretta 2 года назад +10

    And tip 11, as you and Brad both make abundantly clear in ALL of your videos, is to HAVE FUN! Thanks for another outstanding video. I will use this as "homework" for my students in an upcoming beer class I teach at our local college. Thanks again!

  • @andrew3681
    @andrew3681 2 года назад +3

    Such a great help to the craft! It’s essential to cut through the categories of flavors (juicy, bready, sour, etc.) in order to catch the details of how notes fall into those categories. Stories are born out of the poetry of our experiences/histories and the intrigue of those stories is part of what makes beer a culture multiplier.

  • @piedropeer4494
    @piedropeer4494 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you! I’m enjoying your videos very much. Especially the series about the Trappist beers. Keep up the good work 👍🏻

  • @nopenopenein8243
    @nopenopenein8243 2 года назад +3

    Good video. You guys should make a collaboration video with some wine channel where you teach a wine expert to taste beer and the wine expert teaches you to taste wine.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад

      Well this is a nice idea! We might reach out to some and see if they are up for it.

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 2 года назад +1

    I love using Untapped. It's really helped both expand my pallet and my language around beer flavors.

  • @jameslopez958
    @jameslopez958 Год назад

    I agree 💯 percent! We all have different backgrounds of taste and scents 😁. Thanks for sharing the Glass choice for better beer enjoyment 😄👍🤔

  • @C.C-os1cz
    @C.C-os1cz Год назад

    Beer tasting is a philosophy in its own right. I enjoy wine tasting but beer tasting felt like stepping into a new world. I loved how you said that certain flavors take you to someplace. Reminds me of that Pixar movie where the food critic tastes a dish that reminds him of his childhood. 😢

  • @DonsBeerReviews
    @DonsBeerReviews 2 года назад +2

    Great tips. It's a learning process and takes time. I bought loads of those small bottles of flavouring used for cooking and they helped me identify lots of different aromas. I find myself sniffing different foods I buy e.g. bread, fruit etc👍

  • @vincentr.6109
    @vincentr.6109 2 года назад

    I benefited a lot from rating beers and reading other reviews. It's been a while since I actually rated beers, but every so often I read up to see what others are thinking.

  • @Disco-Terry
    @Disco-Terry 2 года назад +4

    I think 7 is very true, the number of times I've not picked out something that's been slapping me in the face all along, goes hand in hand with reading the can. I think from a reviewing/scoring pov and using other people's opinions, I like it when people are consistent and state bias, not a fan of scoring a £1 B&M beer 8/10 because it didn't poison you or giving a sour a 2/10 because it's not a dipa.

  • @nolanmcintyre14
    @nolanmcintyre14 2 года назад

    Big fan of beer school - it's still my number 1 beer read.
    Great point about taste first. I have caught myself, in the past, picking up a beer that was new to me and immediately researching it and checking reviews.
    Humans are so persuadable that I found this bad habit was influencing my experience. Even if you disagree with a review you may go searching for flavours and miss out on your own experience, if that makes sense.

  • @rcollingridge1
    @rcollingridge1 2 года назад +2

    No.8 is spot on - I had a kombucha made with citra the other day and I’ve never been able to identify that hop more clearly, because I had it in a different context then

    • @paskrell
      @paskrell 2 года назад +1

      Home made hop water (beer maverick recipe). It’s a treat.

  • @sonic-factory
    @sonic-factory 2 года назад

    Great tips! I still use my Craft Beer Channel glass that I got a couple of years back with a Beer Merchants order. Top glass!

  • @robingeveke6001
    @robingeveke6001 2 года назад

    I was the first beer nerd in the friend group, so it has happened quite often that I describe a certain flavour, and I could see it click in my friends. Pretty good feeling, to be honest!

  • @dapotatoboy4066
    @dapotatoboy4066 2 года назад

    loving the foliage in the brewdio

  • @PartyTimeBrewing
    @PartyTimeBrewing 2 года назад

    Tip 8 is great! Hoping to start picking up some examples of the flavours pretty soon and working on refining my palate. Then building something with pallets. Had to google the word. The more you know.

  • @Stevedouglas1976
    @Stevedouglas1976 2 года назад

    I think it's about time for a re-read of the book!

  • @iantasker3934
    @iantasker3934 2 года назад

    Beer school was the first book that I bought about 3 years ago......
    Fast forward and I've just bottled my blueberry, chocolate, vanilla and toasted marshmallow imperial pastry stout. Pushing 40 all grain brews....
    Love your content guys!
    Hope to catch you for a beer at some point in the future 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @AndrewSFTSN
    @AndrewSFTSN 5 дней назад

    Thanks for putting "horse blankets" in the crosshairs, always confused the hell out of me that we were meant to know what that is

  • @barakomamma
    @barakomamma 2 года назад

    It's always a pleasure watching these educational videos :)
    Thank you for pointing out the term 'hoppy' as cliched! Genuine annoyance of mine when people use it to describe pales/ipas 😑

  • @mikes1452
    @mikes1452 2 года назад

    Great shirt Jonny! where did you get it from?

  • @liambrown911
    @liambrown911 2 года назад

    Fantastic video ! Recently picked up your Beer School book and has been insightful. Watching this whilst sampling a Belgian Blonde I brewed about three months ago. Picking up a bit of that foam banana sweet From my youth. It's aged beautifully since I bottled it, the first sample was disappointing. Now it's fantastic. Sadly I have one bottle left 😭. Fortunately I've recently acquired a G30 which will hopefully produce an even better result.

  • @marksarinana5903
    @marksarinana5903 2 года назад +2

    Maybe I missed it, but the number one tip for me was to drink more beer.

  • @paulsbeerreviews
    @paulsbeerreviews 2 года назад

    The amount of times I’ve filled a glass up then realised there’s more aroma to come out of the beer, but am unable to roll the beer around without chucking it all over myself.
    Simple tip but really important 😆

  • @JohnL9013
    @JohnL9013 Год назад

    No mention of the Siebel off-flavor kits? Those are essential IMO.

  • @markhowson9694
    @markhowson9694 2 года назад

    Enjoyed that and will be trying all of them out very soon. Just one daft question - what's the best way to chill beer to the correct temperature? My fridge is set to 4 degrees, so how do I chill to 6, 8 etc.?

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      Get the beer out a little bit early basically! Depends on the temp of the room/size and kind of vessel but very roughly it will warm 1c every 10 mins.

  • @ronnymuir
    @ronnymuir 2 года назад

    Bah! I’m a sucker for advertising. I bought your book!

  • @GoblinExplorerENG
    @GoblinExplorerENG Год назад

    Horse blanket? I tend to use "wet dog" and I am not giving up on it!;)

  • @jimbrennan1181
    @jimbrennan1181 2 года назад

    Another great video! #8 is so important. If you've never had gooseberries, lychee, papaya or whatever else someone has said a beer tastes or smells like go get some. Try them ripe and not so ripe. I totally disagree with Jonny, however, that horseblanket is an invalid term. Horse hair and horse sweat has a specific aroma, as does the wool of the blanket, particularly as it ages. It will pick up aromas of the barnyard as aromas are molecules and they'll get in there (and those blankets don't get washed too often!), but horse blankets don't smell directly like a barnyard. What does a barnyard smell like anyway? Well, that depends on the barnyard, so we just use that term in a general way. On that note let me just say that tasting beer isn't really any different than smelling and tasting anything else. Pay attention to what you smell and taste all of the time. Unfortunately there are some unpleasant notes out there (sulphur, rotting meat, feces, etc.) but for the most part paying attention to aromas and flavors you encounter will enrich your experience of life. By the way, if you're one of those people that likes the smell of gasoline, please avoid it as smelling it is bad for your health.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for all the interesting thoughts Jim! Not sure I said horse blanket was an invalid term. Certainly not what I meant - just not a helpful one as only a tiny minority of people have ever smelled one!

  • @justina.6769
    @justina.6769 2 года назад +1

    I have a friend who's wife described a West Coast IPA by saying it smelled like a Christmas Tree and tasted like a pine forest 🤣

  • @thebluep0tat0
    @thebluep0tat0 2 года назад

    Welllll.....there is another beer channel that I used to watch and just got so tired of this guy describing tastes with "Coffee, chocolate, caramel, BUISCUITTY, BREADY, etc"....every review the same taste profiles....if BREADY is even a taste profile. Good video and glad you posted - other beer channels can learn a lot from you guys....including the Storm the Crow guy.

  • @CharlesOffdensen
    @CharlesOffdensen 2 года назад

    The most important thing about tasting anything is to have a glass with very thin walls - the thinner the glass the better. If it can cut you, that's the best.

    • @nolanolson7517
      @nolanolson7517 2 года назад

      Why

    • @CharlesOffdensen
      @CharlesOffdensen 2 года назад

      @@nolanolson7517 Not sure exactly, but the thicker the glass, the less you can taste.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад

      You talking personally here? Don't think there is any scientific reason!

    • @CharlesOffdensen
      @CharlesOffdensen 2 года назад

      @@TheCraftBeerChannel It's anecdotal, but for me, and all the people I have seen trying it, it makes a huge difference. I admit, I am not sure why the thickness of the glass matters that much.

  • @MrHodster
    @MrHodster 2 года назад +3

    anyone else really distracted by the plant branch waving at me and also pointing at Jonny the whole time through the vid? Funny plant based distraction.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      I didn't even clock it til the edit. Sorry!

    • @MrHodster
      @MrHodster 2 года назад

      Nothing to be sorry about. It was funny watching it wag around pointing at you.

  • @oliverhemmings1978
    @oliverhemmings1978 2 года назад

    What is powdery bitterness?

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад

      It is a certain texture produced by heavy late dry hopping. Feels like there's some powder on your tongue.

  • @viper29ca
    @viper29ca 2 года назад

    Of course breweries would have to put a description of the beer on the can for us to read. Many don't. Name, location, ABV and that is it on a great lot of them.
    As far as Untappd "requiring" reviews given? You are gonna get a metric crap ton of comments like: "juicy", "Hoppy", "Bitter", "Meh", "Good", "Bad", "tasty", "mmm mmm good", in which case you may as well just not leave any comment, which many do now. I am guilty of it as well. If it is the 83rd time I have had the same beer, good chance I am not going to put a comment
    However I agree with the rest

  • @burwho
    @burwho 2 года назад

    Never thought I'd see a video tutorial on how to taste something. Are you guys all out of ideas or?!

  • @Teejrocks83
    @Teejrocks83 2 года назад

    My advertisement only promised $1500 per day... I feel short changed...

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      Hey but you now know how to drink better too!

    • @Teejrocks83
      @Teejrocks83 2 года назад

      @@TheCraftBeerChannel I shall inform the wife! (she will be impressed by my newly acquired drinking powers, right?)

  • @tonybeatbutcher
    @tonybeatbutcher 2 года назад

    Another tip maybe: don't get to drunk

  • @HopZine
    @HopZine 2 года назад

    My descriptor for Bret is sometimes washing powder or freshly cleaned public toilet... depending on the specific beer...sometimes a well used public toilet...I won't be buying that beer again.

  • @marcelhaas
    @marcelhaas 2 года назад

    But, but, but.... don't swirl too much, right?! It smashes the carbonation out of there, which really influences mouthfeel and, hence, flavor reception.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      Absolutely. Hence another reason to only put a small amount of the beer in the glass.

  • @jamespreston7823
    @jamespreston7823 2 года назад

    more volume please

  • @manosox
    @manosox 2 года назад +1

    no Teku glass? hum...

  • @ColinLeuze
    @ColinLeuze Год назад

    I know what horse blanket smells like and it’s not like farmyard.

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  Год назад

      Tell us more! What does it smell like?

    • @ColinLeuze
      @ColinLeuze Год назад

      @@TheCraftBeerChannel the closest thing I can think of is if you've ever been into an old person's home where things have been there since the 60s and it has that distinctive smell. It's different, but they might be second cousins.

  • @Margarinetaylorgrease
    @Margarinetaylorgrease 2 года назад

    I hate "juicy", I have no idea what it means :)

    • @TheCraftBeerChannel
      @TheCraftBeerChannel  2 года назад +1

      It means something different to everyone... so as a result it doesn't mean much at all

    • @Margarinetaylorgrease
      @Margarinetaylorgrease 2 года назад

      @@TheCraftBeerChannel Politician talk.
      My beer tastes like freedom..

  • @theoldgrowler3489
    @theoldgrowler3489 2 года назад +2

    Work on vocabulary!

  • @paulhunter445
    @paulhunter445 Год назад

    3 swirl about then moan about the carbonation

  • @mrougelot
    @mrougelot 2 года назад

    Is it me or is the brewdio getting more and more cramped with more and more stuff on each video? At this rate next year you’ll have to stand in the garden while filming.

  • @DonKanone83
    @DonKanone83 2 года назад

    First of all, you should accept my friend request before even start talking about untappd... I AM SO MAD ABOUT IT RIGHT NOW 😉😅