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My local growler shop regularly has a variety of stouts on tap, of which I usually pick Imperial.

What, specifically, distinguishes an Imperial stout from other kinds of stouts (say a regular stout, an oatmeal stout etc)?

Adam Rackis
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wax eagle
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2 Answers2

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The first Imperial Stout was made by Thrale's Brewery to export to the Russian royalty, it had high alcoholic content so that it could survive the trip gracefully [1]. Since then Imperial has been used as a prefix to signify beers which are of higher alcohol volume than their normal variants, and luckily they're no longer just for Russian royalty.

Kasra Rahjerdi
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    You might also be interested in our [homebrewing site's response to a similar question](http://homebrew.stackexchange.com/questions/949/what-does-imperial-mean-with-regards-to-beer-style). – Kasra Rahjerdi Jan 21 '14 at 21:05
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The term "imperial" generally means "strong", as in having a higher ABV. You may also find "Imperial IPAs" (aka IIPAs, or sometimes Double or Triple IPAs), and again, they are boosting the alcohol content. The actual ingredients (hops, or oatmeal, as per your example) do not come into play, except to balance the flavors against the malt.

object88
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