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15. Irish Beer

15C. Irish Extra Stout

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BJCP Explorer Style Profile

This BJCP record is outside the Certified Cicerone Level 2 beer-style list and is included for Advanced Cicerone review.

Style code
15C
Category
15. Irish Beer
Cicerone exam alignment
Advanced Cicerone
Source
BJCP 2021 Beer Style Guidelines

Overall Impression

A fuller-bodied black beer with a pronounced roasted flavor, often similar to coffee and dark chocolate with some malty complexity. The balance can range from moderately bittersweet to bitter, with the more balanced versions having up to moderate malty richness and the bitter versions being quite dry.

Aroma

Moderate to moderately high coffee-like aroma, often with slight dark chocolate, cocoa, biscuit, vanilla, or roasted grain secondary notes. Medium-low esters optional. Hop aroma low to none, may be lightly earthy or spicy, but is typically absent. Malt and roast dominate the aroma.

Appearance

Jet black. Opaque. A thick, creamy, persistent tan head is characteristic.

Flavor

Moderate to moderately high dark-roasted grain or malt flavor with a medium to medium-high bitterness. The finish can be dry and coffee-like to moderately balanced with up to moderate caramel or malty sweetness. Typically has roasted coffee-like flavors, but also often has a dark chocolate character in the palate, lasting into the finish. Background mocha or biscuit flavors are often present and add complexity. Medium-low fruitiness optional. Medium earthy or spicy hop flavor optional. The level of bitterness is somewhat variable, as is the roasted character and the dryness of the finish; allow for interpretation by brewers.

Mouthfeel

Medium-full to full body, with a somewhat creamy character. Moderate carbonation. Very smooth. May have a light astringency from the roasted grains, although harshness is undesirable. A slightly warming character may be detected.

Comments

Traditionally a stronger, bottled product with a range of equally valid possible interpretations, varying most frequently in roast flavor and sweetness. Most traditional Irish commercial examples are in the 5.6 to 6.0% ABV range.

Characteristic Ingredients

Similar to Irish Stout. May have additional dark crystal malts or dark sugars.

Style Comparison

Midway between an Irish Stout and a Foreign Extra Stout in strength and flavor intensity, although with a similar balance. More body, richness, and often malt complexity than an Irish Stout. Black in color, not brown like an English Porter.

Vital Statistics

IBU
35 - 50
SRM
30 - 40
OG
1.052 - 1.062
FG
1.010 - 1.014
ABV
5% - 6.5%

Commercial Examples

Guinness Extra Stout, O’Hara’s Leann Folláin, Porterhouse XXXX, Sheaf Stout

Style Attributes

bitter british-isles dark-color high-strength roasty stout-family top-fermented traditional-style