Hi,
I'm a fairly new full grain brewer, with about a year under my belt. I've brewed some good beer and like most had a few misses. Most of my recipes are my own, built by reading various recipes around a particular idea I have and then tweaking to my own ideas. I've brewed DIPAs, NEIPAs, IPAs, Pales and pale largers.
The last 4 batches I've had issues with what I considered to be oxidation, I tend to brew hazy NEIPAs more than anything, but recently my beers all seem to look fantastic as I sample from the fermenter. But then once kegged for anything from a few days to a couple of weeks, the bitterness seems to increase combined with a souring and a darkening in colour. I begin to notice as I'm drinking a glass, and as the beer begins to warm in the glass maybe after 15-20 minutes, a sour flavor begins to develop. The longer you leave it your glass the more this increases.
After a few more days/weeks the beer becomes darker coloured (hence my thoughts around oxidation) and the the sour/bitter flavour develops more, to the point you taste it immediately after pouring a pint.
Originally I wondered if this was related to hop creep, due to the hazy, oaty, heavy hopped nature of NEIPAs, but the current beer in my kegs is a pale larger which has a much lower hopping both in the kettle and dry hops and it has begun to suffer the same issue. The recipe for the pale larger is one I've brewed before and it came out fantastically last time, I did make one change and that was to use Voss Kveik, as it was a last minute brew that I wanted it drinkable within 2 weeks.
Here is the process I've adopted for a while and I have produced a number of beers without issue, but as mentioned the last 4 have consistently had the same problem, despite following the same process.
I use brewzyme to clean my equipment after each brew and then clean with star san before I start brewing on the day using CIP balls.
I use a Brewtools B80, my strike water is 54c and I adjust my water by filtering and then typically using lactic acid, calcium carbonate, gypsum and epsom salts using the calcs on brewfather. My water is fairly good being in Manchester, where we have some fantastic breweries like Cloudwater.
I then lower my grains in to the strike water and hold at 50c for 20 for a protein rest.
I mash for 60 minutes usually at 65c
Then mash out at 73c for 20 minutes and sparge with around 2/3s of the quantity of water I mash with.
I then boil for an hour and add yeast nutrients at either 1 or 2 times the dosing rate depending on if I'm using Ale yeast or Kviek. I may also add a protofloc depending on if I'm brewing a hazy or not.
I then use a counter flow chiller, cooling to between 20 and 35 depending on if I use Kveik or ale yeast.
I pump the beer to a 14gal SS Brewtech Chronical fermenter airating by holding the pipe as high as I can above the fermenter.
I then pitch my yeast either from a starter or in the case of my current brew with voss kveik using 2 packets for a 44l batch.
I have a heating jacket and glycol converted line chiller to control the fermenter temperature which I use with Fermentrack. I'm able to hold my beer within about +/-0.2c with this setup.
I harvest the CO2 from my fermenter to purge my kegs which I first fill to overflowing with star san to liquid purge, and to give me a CO2 resevoir for any suck back during cold crashing. I do this by connecting a small 5l keg and 2x 19l kegs to the blowoff I have connected to the lid of the fermenter.
Depending on the yeast my fermentation profile will be different, but the last brew with Voss Kveik went as follows:
2 days 35c
3 days 30c (I then dump any yeast that has collected and dry hopped at 30c which I don't usually do I usually dry hop cool ~13c)
I will dump my hops after 24 hours and continue dumping trub each day.
I then checked my gravity and did a forced diacetyl test.
I then cold crash for 2 days, dumping trub as it collects.
I rack my beer in fairly wide silicone tube 10mm I/D to my keg (which I think is perhaps too wide and I'm looking to replace - however I have also produced beer with no issues through this same pipe)
My kegs are connected together with disconnects and I do a closed pressure transfer allowing the harvested CO2 to be push back in to the fermenter by gravity fed beer coming out of the fermenter, I apply a little fresh CO2 to the fermenter if necessary (sometimes the NEIPAs need a little more help due to the amount of hops).
I force carb my beer at 45psi bubbling the CO2 through the out port on the keg for about 36 hours, before dropping down to 10psi or 20psi for a couple of days if the carbonation level isn't quite there. And then drop further to 5-8psi for serving.
I have a kegerator and I clean my line after every keg and the taps also.
So that is pretty much my typical process, I have wondered about adding other antioxidants like sodium metasulphate or pure vit c before kegging but haven't tried this yet.
I'm starting to think it's not an oxidation problem, as I've had beers I've fermented in a plastic bucket and racked in to an open keg come out better and without this issue. Could it possible be some infection, perhaps something like lactobaccilus due to the acidic flavour that's occuring or maybe something else entirely?
I'm currently stipping all my valves and keg posts in case there is something lurking somewhere. And I even replaced my beer line and dismantled my taps this time before serving.
Thanks in advance
Andy
I'm a fairly new full grain brewer, with about a year under my belt. I've brewed some good beer and like most had a few misses. Most of my recipes are my own, built by reading various recipes around a particular idea I have and then tweaking to my own ideas. I've brewed DIPAs, NEIPAs, IPAs, Pales and pale largers.
The last 4 batches I've had issues with what I considered to be oxidation, I tend to brew hazy NEIPAs more than anything, but recently my beers all seem to look fantastic as I sample from the fermenter. But then once kegged for anything from a few days to a couple of weeks, the bitterness seems to increase combined with a souring and a darkening in colour. I begin to notice as I'm drinking a glass, and as the beer begins to warm in the glass maybe after 15-20 minutes, a sour flavor begins to develop. The longer you leave it your glass the more this increases.
After a few more days/weeks the beer becomes darker coloured (hence my thoughts around oxidation) and the the sour/bitter flavour develops more, to the point you taste it immediately after pouring a pint.
Originally I wondered if this was related to hop creep, due to the hazy, oaty, heavy hopped nature of NEIPAs, but the current beer in my kegs is a pale larger which has a much lower hopping both in the kettle and dry hops and it has begun to suffer the same issue. The recipe for the pale larger is one I've brewed before and it came out fantastically last time, I did make one change and that was to use Voss Kveik, as it was a last minute brew that I wanted it drinkable within 2 weeks.
Here is the process I've adopted for a while and I have produced a number of beers without issue, but as mentioned the last 4 have consistently had the same problem, despite following the same process.
I use brewzyme to clean my equipment after each brew and then clean with star san before I start brewing on the day using CIP balls.
I use a Brewtools B80, my strike water is 54c and I adjust my water by filtering and then typically using lactic acid, calcium carbonate, gypsum and epsom salts using the calcs on brewfather. My water is fairly good being in Manchester, where we have some fantastic breweries like Cloudwater.
I then lower my grains in to the strike water and hold at 50c for 20 for a protein rest.
I mash for 60 minutes usually at 65c
Then mash out at 73c for 20 minutes and sparge with around 2/3s of the quantity of water I mash with.
I then boil for an hour and add yeast nutrients at either 1 or 2 times the dosing rate depending on if I'm using Ale yeast or Kviek. I may also add a protofloc depending on if I'm brewing a hazy or not.
I then use a counter flow chiller, cooling to between 20 and 35 depending on if I use Kveik or ale yeast.
I pump the beer to a 14gal SS Brewtech Chronical fermenter airating by holding the pipe as high as I can above the fermenter.
I then pitch my yeast either from a starter or in the case of my current brew with voss kveik using 2 packets for a 44l batch.
I have a heating jacket and glycol converted line chiller to control the fermenter temperature which I use with Fermentrack. I'm able to hold my beer within about +/-0.2c with this setup.
I harvest the CO2 from my fermenter to purge my kegs which I first fill to overflowing with star san to liquid purge, and to give me a CO2 resevoir for any suck back during cold crashing. I do this by connecting a small 5l keg and 2x 19l kegs to the blowoff I have connected to the lid of the fermenter.
Depending on the yeast my fermentation profile will be different, but the last brew with Voss Kveik went as follows:
2 days 35c
3 days 30c (I then dump any yeast that has collected and dry hopped at 30c which I don't usually do I usually dry hop cool ~13c)
I will dump my hops after 24 hours and continue dumping trub each day.
I then checked my gravity and did a forced diacetyl test.
I then cold crash for 2 days, dumping trub as it collects.
I rack my beer in fairly wide silicone tube 10mm I/D to my keg (which I think is perhaps too wide and I'm looking to replace - however I have also produced beer with no issues through this same pipe)
My kegs are connected together with disconnects and I do a closed pressure transfer allowing the harvested CO2 to be push back in to the fermenter by gravity fed beer coming out of the fermenter, I apply a little fresh CO2 to the fermenter if necessary (sometimes the NEIPAs need a little more help due to the amount of hops).
I force carb my beer at 45psi bubbling the CO2 through the out port on the keg for about 36 hours, before dropping down to 10psi or 20psi for a couple of days if the carbonation level isn't quite there. And then drop further to 5-8psi for serving.
I have a kegerator and I clean my line after every keg and the taps also.
So that is pretty much my typical process, I have wondered about adding other antioxidants like sodium metasulphate or pure vit c before kegging but haven't tried this yet.
I'm starting to think it's not an oxidation problem, as I've had beers I've fermented in a plastic bucket and racked in to an open keg come out better and without this issue. Could it possible be some infection, perhaps something like lactobaccilus due to the acidic flavour that's occuring or maybe something else entirely?
I'm currently stipping all my valves and keg posts in case there is something lurking somewhere. And I even replaced my beer line and dismantled my taps this time before serving.
Thanks in advance
Andy