Consumer Reports on Craft Beer: #Fail
Consumer Reports, the independent magazine that tests and rates products, has for the first time turned its attention to craft beer. I am a big fan of CR and have periodically subscribed in advance of car and appliance purchases. When the magazine's testers have empirical metrics to assess--the actual miles per gallon of a car, the range of features of a refrigerator--they do an excellent job of cutting through the wall of PR you get from the companies themselves.
When they turn their attention to subjective measures like the flavors of beer ... not so much. The magazine took 23 beers, apparently at random, and put them through their rigorous--if wholly clueless--tasting regime. What did the hardy band of untrained, eager tasters discover? Oh, things like:
I imagine the scene of CR secretly assessing the art at MoMa. "The best works are bright, detailed, and harmonious, but the worst are monochromatic, muddy, and lack intensity. We found the Cezanne and Van Gogh paintings to be vivid and descriptive, but the Seurats duller, less lifelike. One rater compared the lowest-rated painting, a Rothko, to a smudge on the side of his house."
Context matters. If you don't understand why a beer tastes the way it does, you're not going to appreciate the flavors you apprehend. If all you're looking for is complexity and intensity, you're only going to like a small percentage of the beers out there. But that doesn't mean those are the only good ones.
Source: Consumer Reports |
When they turn their attention to subjective measures like the flavors of beer ... not so much. The magazine took 23 beers, apparently at random, and put them through their rigorous--if wholly clueless--tasting regime. What did the hardy band of untrained, eager tasters discover? Oh, things like:
- "The best ales have intense, complex, and balanced flavors" but
- "The best lagers are very tasty but not quite complex or intense enough to be excellent"
- The worst beers "are decent but not as balanced, complex, or intense as the others, and some have off-flavors—hinting of cheese, soda water, or even paint." One of those worst beers? Sierra Nevada Kellerweis. One wonders which off-flavor in that beer caused it to be downgraded.
I imagine the scene of CR secretly assessing the art at MoMa. "The best works are bright, detailed, and harmonious, but the worst are monochromatic, muddy, and lack intensity. We found the Cezanne and Van Gogh paintings to be vivid and descriptive, but the Seurats duller, less lifelike. One rater compared the lowest-rated painting, a Rothko, to a smudge on the side of his house."
Context matters. If you don't understand why a beer tastes the way it does, you're not going to appreciate the flavors you apprehend. If all you're looking for is complexity and intensity, you're only going to like a small percentage of the beers out there. But that doesn't mean those are the only good ones.