Beer Styles: Difference between revisions
From BrewWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Added American Brown) |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
* [[American Barleywine]] | * [[American Barleywine]] | ||
* [[American Brown Ale]] | * [[American Brown Ale]] | ||
* [[American IPA]] | |||
* [[American Pale Ale]] | * [[American Pale Ale]] | ||
* [[Baltic Porter]] | * [[Baltic Porter]] | ||
Line 20: | Line 21: | ||
---- | ---- | ||
* [http://www.bjcp.org BJCP Beer Style Guideline] - The style guidelines used for US competition | * [http://www.bjcp.org BJCP Beer Style Guideline] - The style guidelines used for US competition | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
* [[References|Brewing References]] | * [[References|Brewing References]] |
Revision as of 23:14, 3 August 2006
BrewWiki Portal Beer Styles
Beers are categorized into styles such as Stouts, Porters, Weizen, Pilsner, and India Pale Ale. Most beer styles originated in a particular country, region or city. There are literally hundreds of unique styles of beer from around the world. Arguably the best accepted style guide for the homebrewer today is the BJCP Style Guideline which currently contains 28 main style categories and is used to judge most US beer competitions.
Beer Style Listing
- Amber Ale
- American Barleywine
- American Brown Ale
- American IPA
- American Pale Ale
- Baltic Porter
- Berliner Weiss
- Biere de Garde
- Blonde Ale
- California Common
- Dry Stout
- English Barleywine
- Irish Red Ale
- Pilsner
- [Add additional styles here]
- BJCP Beer Style Guideline - The style guidelines used for US competition
See Also
External Links
- BJCP Style Guideline - The definitive beer judging style guideline