Tasting & Evaluation
The Beer Flavor Wheel
Origin and Purpose
The Beer Flavor Wheel was developed by Morten Meilgaard and colleagues in the 1970s for the European Brewery Convention (EBC) and the American Society of Brewing Chemists (ASBC). It provides a standardized vocabulary for describing beer flavor, enabling brewers, judges, and quality-control professionals to communicate precisely.
Structure of the Wheel
The wheel is organized in concentric rings, moving from general to specific:
Inner ring (14 classes) — broad categories: oxidized, sulfury, fatty acid, diacetyl, grainy, caramelized, roasted, cereal, aromatic/fruity/floral/hoppy, sour/acidic, sweet, salty, bitter, mouthfeel.
Middle ring — subdivisions within each class. For example, the "fruity" class splits into citrus, berry, stone fruit, tropical fruit, and dried fruit.
Outer ring — specific descriptors and reference compounds. "Citrus" specifies grapefruit, orange, lemon, lime. Each descriptor maps to a chemical compound when possible.
How to Use the Wheel
During Evaluation
Start at the inner ring. Identify which broad class applies. Move outward to pinpoint the specific descriptor. This systematic approach prevents the common mistake of grasping for descriptors randomly.
Example: You detect a fruity note. Is it citrus or tropical? Citrus. Is it grapefruit or orange? Grapefruit. This is consistent with hop-derived myrcene and limonene compounds, suggesting a Citra or Cascade hop presence.
For Off-Flavor Diagnosis
The wheel maps flavor to cause. If you identify a "sulfury, cooked vegetable" note in the inner ring, the middle ring guides you to DMS. The outer ring confirms the descriptor (creamed corn) and links to the cause (SMM from pale malt, inadequate boiling).
For Communication
When writing tasting notes, using wheel terminology ensures that other trained tasters understand your description precisely. "Moderate citrus (grapefruit) hop aroma" is universally understood. "Smells hoppy" is vague and subjective.
Key Flavor Classes in Detail
Oxidized / Stale
Papery, cardboard, wet cardboard, sherry, winey. Caused by oxygen exposure during or after fermentation. The aldehyde trans-2-nonenal is the primary compound responsible for the cardboard note.
Sulfury
Hydrogen sulfide (rotten egg), sulfur dioxide (struck match), mercaptan (drains). Common in lager fermentation, should condition out. Persistent sulfur notes indicate yeast stress or contamination.
Diacetyl
Butter, butterscotch, buttery slickness on the palate. A vicinal diketone (VDK) produced by all yeast. Normal at low levels in some English ales; a flaw in lagers and clean ales.
Phenolic
Clove (4-vinyl guaiacol), smoky (phenol), medicinal (chlorophenol), Band-Aid. Desirable clove character in Belgian and wheat beers. Medicinal/plastic character always a flaw (chlorine in water).
Fruity (Esters)
Banana (isoamyl acetate), pear (ethyl acetate at low levels), strawberry, apple. Produced by yeast during fermentation. Controlled by temperature, pitch rate, and yeast strain.
Beyond the Meilgaard Wheel
Modern craft beer has expanded the flavor universe beyond the original wheel. Tropical fruit descriptors (mango, passion fruit, guava) from New World hop varieties were not prominent in 1979. Some organizations have published expanded wheels or supplementary flavor lexicons. The core wheel remains the foundation, with modern additions addressing contemporary ingredients and techniques.
Practical Exercise
Print the wheel and keep it at your tasting station. For your next ten beers, force yourself to locate every descriptor you write on the wheel. This exercise builds wheel literacy and ensures your vocabulary aligns with industry standards.