Should gluten-free beers have their own classification?

Talk Discussion in 'BeerAdvocate Talk' started by BowWowWowYippyYoIPA, Mar 26, 2015.

Tags:
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. BowWowWowYippyYoIPA

    BowWowWowYippyYoIPA Initiate (0) Dec 30, 2014 California

    I'm generally not an advocate of additional classification, but I feel that gluten-free beers should have their own recognized beer type (speaking specifically for this site). They use an entirely unique malt bill, and lack a component found in all other traditional styles of beer. And if one is to judge by style, it is unfair to judge a gluten-free offering against another beer brewed with traditional ingredients.

    I'm not saying that there should be a gluten-free version of every beer category, just a catch-all, umbrella category (and possibly a gluten-reduced category as well).

    I myself have never had a gluten free beer I've truly enjoyed, I just think it's a distinction that should be made.
     
  2. Orca

    Orca Grand Pooh-Bah (4,710) Sep 18, 2010 Washington
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Makes sense to me. Creating this category might at least make it easier for people who need to drink gluten-free beer to find the best ones available.

    But where would it go? Currently on BA beers are categorized first as ales or lagers, and then mostly by nationality. "Hybrid Styles" is the only "miscellaneous" category, but I don't know that it applies.
     
    #2 Orca, Mar 26, 2015
    Last edited: Mar 26, 2015
  3. Pantalones

    Pantalones Initiate (0) Nov 14, 2014 Virginia

    Well, the low-alcohol/alcohol-free beers have their own "style" category on here, so there is some precedent for a "beer without one of the things that's usually in beer" category to exist.
     
    hardy008 and jmdrpi like this.
  4. Eriktheipaman

    Eriktheipaman Pooh-Bah (2,303) Sep 4, 2010 California
    Pooh-Bah

    Look up Clarity Ferm, it'll change your opinion on what gluten free or gluten reduced really means.

    For instance Alpine produces gluten reduced beers. The term "gluten reduced" compared to "gluten free" is all politics btw.
     
    tylerstravis and jmdrpi like this.
  5. Satchboogie

    Satchboogie Initiate (0) Oct 16, 2010 Belgium
    Trader

    Depends on how it's made. Stone Delicious is brewed with malted barley just as is normal but then they have some fancy process that removes gluten I guess afterwards. I wouldn't necessarily say that belongs in a "gluten free" category opposed to IPA. The true gluten free beers though (forget the name) are nasty and belong discriminated against!!!!
     
    Scarfer_Brad likes this.
  6. Providence

    Providence Pooh-Bah (2,652) Feb 24, 2010 Rhode Island
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Definitely. It would allow people who drink gluten free beers to more easily find information on them using beeradvocate.
     
    twb0392, t420o, Scarfer_Brad and 4 others like this.
  7. JohnnyHopps

    JohnnyHopps Grand Pooh-Bah (3,380) Jun 15, 2010 Indiana
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    I think the other benefit would be a list ranking gluten free beers once it was its own category. That way, BAs know what the best ones are.
     
  8. digitalflood

    digitalflood Pooh-Bah (1,600) Feb 4, 2011 New York
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

    I do think it makes sense. You can sub-category the specific style, but knowing it was gluten free would probably be the primary reason someone would start looking at a given beer in that category. So it seems to deserve at least some kind of label if not necessarily a true style per say. It is a way of brewing.
     
    DogbiteWilliams likes this.
  9. DaverCS

    DaverCS Savant (1,212) Dec 9, 2014 Arizona

    I think that would allow for a better push for gluten-free beers. I personally haven't liked any I have tried, but they really aren't designed for me :wink:. Creating a separate category would allow for competition amongst brewers thus producing better brews, and it would even allow for separate areas in contests for such a category (bourbon barrel aged gluten-free beer here we come). This would thus get more people into craft beer and help sustain small breweries even better!
     
    DogbiteWilliams and Duff27 like this.
  10. tylerstravis

    tylerstravis Pooh-Bah (2,487) Feb 14, 2014 Colorado
    Pooh-Bah

    It cracks me up. You can either have gluten or you cannot (celiacs). 'Reduced gluten' is hilarious!
     
  11. monkeybeerbelly

    monkeybeerbelly Initiate (0) Dec 6, 2012 New York

    i disagree. i stopped eating wheat nearly two years ago, which i quickly found out meant eating mostly gluten free products. (I'm eating gluten free mac n' cheese as i type this. no joke)
    i have found that i dont react to beer quite the same way i would a pastrami on rye.
    when i eat wheat or other gluten-ous items i react pretty strongly so i welcome the gluten free as well as the gluten reduced beer. and for your information some people with celiac have a tolerance for some gluten so the reduced gluten beers are actually in demand
     
    DogbiteWilliams and twb0392 like this.
  12. JoelAK

    JoelAK Initiate (0) Sep 10, 2014 New York

    Given that Stone "Delicious IPA" is testing out at less than 10ppm, I suppose they could call it "gluten-free".

    And one can have a gluten-sensitivity and not be celiac, so this is a great quality option.
     
  13. RicoBrew

    RicoBrew Initiate (0) Nov 12, 2008 California

    Adding Clarity Ferm will reduce gluten below measurable levels in the bottled beer. They're pretty sure there's no gluten in the beer, but with the current testing method, they can't say for sure there's absolutely no gluten in Delicious. The FDA classifies the Celiac threshold as 20ppm total gluten concentration. According to some gluten testing websites, Hefeweizens typically come in at around 800-1000 ppm gluten due to using malted wheat and no filtration.
     
    DogbiteWilliams likes this.
  14. Blueribbon666

    Blueribbon666 Pooh-Bah (1,669) Jul 4, 2008 Ohio
    Pooh-Bah

    Uhhhhh how 'bout gluten free beer...says it all. We've got enough sub genres.
     
    BMBCLT likes this.
  15. Eriktheipaman

    Eriktheipaman Pooh-Bah (2,303) Sep 4, 2010 California
    Pooh-Bah

    The way it works is that if the product has ever had gluten in it, it cannot be called "gluten free". So while the beers tend to be what a normal person would call gluten free the FDA insists that it must be called "gluten reduced".
     
  16. Urk1127

    Urk1127 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,790) Jul 2, 2014 New Jersey
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    I've had several gluten free beers and it was much lighter than normal beers. I think IMO they should be their own category. Especially since there are people with celiac disease or are gluten intolerant. They should be able to easily classify whether or not the beer could make them ache or sick. Also. The brewing process must be different so yes. Give them their own category. And some people I know personally choose not to eat gluten but could handle some if they so choose. So if gluten is then introduced to their body they ache or puke or whatever. So reduced gluten is fine but should be in the category also.
     
  17. t420o

    t420o Maven (1,272) Jul 16, 2009 California

    I completely agree with you. It's not a perfect classification because of its generality but gluten free beers are unique unto themselves.
     
    twb0392 likes this.
  18. JoelAK

    JoelAK Initiate (0) Sep 10, 2014 New York

    The way it works is that if the product has ever had gluten in it, it cannot be called "gluten free". So while the beers tend to be what a normal person would call gluten free the FDA insists that it must be called "gluten reduced".[/QUOTE]

    Good point. Fair enough!
     
    Eriktheipaman likes this.
  19. tylerstravis

    tylerstravis Pooh-Bah (2,487) Feb 14, 2014 Colorado
    Pooh-Bah

    Thanks. That makes more sense than the 'low gluten' I was thinking of.
     
    Eriktheipaman likes this.
  20. CheapHysterics

    CheapHysterics Initiate (0) Apr 1, 2009 Pennsylvania

    Definitely need a category of their own. No way it's remotely fair to rate a gluten free/reduced beer vs. a normal one, plus there ought to be an easy way for people with gluten issues to see what the highest rated ones are and to find the names of new ones to seek out.
     
    spooons, DogbiteWilliams and twb0392 like this.
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.