Glossary of Tasting Terms
Adjuncts
Any unmalted cereal grain or fermentable ingredients such as rice, corn or sugar added to beer which contributes fermentable sugar without adding flavor or nutritional value.
Amber
Describes the style or color of a beer between pale and dark, sometimes with a reddish hue.
Balance
The combination and relationship of components in a beer. When neither the sweetness of malt nor the bitterness of hops predominates a beer is said to be well balanced. (See well balanced.)
Belgian lace
- Bitter
-
- Hops and other herbs have bittering qualities that contrast with the sweetness of malt.
Big
Fullness of flavor due to the richness of malt, and usually the presence of high alcohol and/or sugar.
Bitterness Units (IBUs)
Black
A term that describes dark brown, almost opaque beers.
Bland
Not complimentary. Mild, easy, characterless; not unpleasant.
Body
The texture or viscosity in the mouth as a result of malt proteins and dextrins that have not been fermented.
Bouquet
Buttery
Caramel
A slightly burnt, toffee-like flavor.
Character
A beer of any quality, which has unmistakable and distinctive features.
Clean
Clove
Cloying
Coarse
Crisp
A desirable feature in Weiss beers and pils; firm, refreshing, positive acidity.
Depth
Richness, subtlety; seemingly layers of flavors all interlocked.
Fermentation
Finesse
Grace, delicacy, breed, distinction. Elegant, with a stylish balance and refined quality.
Finish
Flat
Dull, insipid, lacking carbonation and/or acidity.
Flowery
Fragrant, flowerlike. Hops are a flower with a beautiful herbal aroma.
Fresh
Fruity
The presence in beer of grape, apple, blackberry, cherry, black currant, newly mown hay, peach, pear, apricots, banana or other trace flavors known as esters. Not to be confused with beers such as Lambics which are actually made with fruits.
Full-bodied
An abundance of flavors, especially malt, in the taste of beers. Not necessarily high in alcohol.
Haze
Protein or yeast in suspension, giving beer a turbidity and mouth feel.
Head
The foam on top of a glass of beer. The best beers can have a head composed of small, tightly packed bubbles, or a large, billowing, uneven head. The head can easily be ruined by using a glass that is not "beer clean" (thoroughly rinsed with cold water until no soap residue remains).
Heavy
Hops
The female flowers of the perennial hop plant, Humulus Lupulus.
Malting
The process of moistening grain, allowing it to germinate, and then stopping germination by heating or drying in a kiln. Malting converts insoluble starch in barley into sugars that can be fermented.
Malty
A beer with an earthy flavor of roasted malt. Malty flavors include caramel, treacle, molasses, smoke, roasted, coffee-like and earthy.
Microbrew
Mouth feel
Oxidized
Flat, stale, off-taste due to exposure to oxygen.
Rich
Should not automatically imply sweetness although it often does in barley wines and other high-gravity brews.
Silky
Smooth
Soft, easy texture. No rough edges.
Spicy
A rich aroma and flavor bestowed mostly by hops, and occasionally by other natural seasonings and preservatives such as oregano, orange peel, lemon, peppers and coriander.
Styles
Taste
Thin
Deficient in natural properties; watery, lacking body.
Well-balanced
A beer in which neither the sweetness of the malt nor the bitterness of the hops predominates. (See balance.)
Yeast
An organic compound that feeds on the sugars present in the sweet wort and creates two by-products: alcohol and carbon dioxide. Louis Pasteur first discovered its true role in the late 19th century. In the Middle Ages, it was known as "God is good."
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