Gose vs. Berliner Weisse is a comparison I return to often when thinking about sour beer accessibility — both are low-alcohol, highly refreshing German wheat beers with acidity as a defining character, but the salt and coriander of Gose versus …
John Brewster
John Brewster
John Brewster is the homebrewer and writer behind BrewMyBeer — over a decade of all-grain brewing, 80+ BIAB batches, and 1,000+ guides on fermentation science, water chemistry, hops, yeast, and homebrewing equipment. Every guide is written from genuine hands-on experience.
Hefeweizen vs. Witbier was the comparison that first made me appreciate how differently wheat is used across brewing traditions — both styles use wheat as a major ingredient and both are unfiltered with a hazy appearance, but the yeast character, …
Pale Ale vs. IPA is one of the most practically important comparisons for homebrewers because the boundary between the two styles is genuinely blurry in practice — I’ve brewed recipes that could be labelled either way and found that the …
Dubbel vs. Tripel is a comparison I find genuinely fascinating because both styles emerge from the same Trappist monastery brewing tradition yet arrive at entirely different flavour profiles through a simple mechanism — the proportion of sugar in the
NEIPA vs. West Coast IPA is the most debated style comparison in contemporary craft brewing, and having brewed both extensively I can say the difference is far more than haze — the brewing philosophy, ingredient selection, and drinking experience are
The Helles vs. Pilsner question trips up even experienced homebrewers — I’ve brewed both styles multiple times and the subtle but meaningful differences in malt character, hop expression, and brewing approach have taught me that these are genuinely d
The stout vs. porter question is one that brewing enthusiasts ask me regularly, and the honest answer is that the historical boundary between the two styles was never clearly defined and still isn’t — what I’ve found through brewing both …
Understanding the difference between lager and ale was one of the first brewing questions I tried to answer seriously, and the more I’ve brewed both styles the more I’ve come to appreciate that the distinction is more nuanced than “top-fermenting …
International Pale Lager is the style that represents 90% of the beer consumed in India and most of the world, and I’ve brewed it specifically to understand what a well-made version of the dominant global beer style actually tastes like …
Dark American Lager is a style I’ve brewed specifically to understand how the mainstream American brewing industry approaches dark colour — the combination of clean lager character, very light body, and minimal roast from small specialty malt additio