Hi everyone
I'm looking for a few tips to help me improve the chill haze I am seeing in my homebrew.
This is my brew process:
* Grain brew; main malt is maris otter pale malt, plus a little bit (30g) of chocolate malt
* Mash for 90 minutes at single temperature (66-67C)
* Mash out to bring grain to 76C
* Fly sparge at 76C over ~40 minutes (efficiency ~80%)
* Good boil for 90 minutes - leave foam in the wort, loose hops
* Irish moss (non-hydrated) added for last 10-15 mins
* Immersion chilled. 100 - 25C in 10 minutes
* Wort transferred to fermenting bin through copper pipe in bottom of kettle with holes in. Wort passed through a hop bag to remove trub etc
* Primary ferment for 7 days
* Secondary ferment for 14 days
* Bottle conditioned
The bear is very clear in the bottle, but once in the fridge, cloudy. Does anyone have any ideas for (1) removing the source of the haze in my brew process and/or (2) removing the haze once the proteins etc are (regrettably) in the beer.
Cheers!
John
I'm looking for a few tips to help me improve the chill haze I am seeing in my homebrew.
This is my brew process:
* Grain brew; main malt is maris otter pale malt, plus a little bit (30g) of chocolate malt
* Mash for 90 minutes at single temperature (66-67C)
* Mash out to bring grain to 76C
* Fly sparge at 76C over ~40 minutes (efficiency ~80%)
* Good boil for 90 minutes - leave foam in the wort, loose hops
* Irish moss (non-hydrated) added for last 10-15 mins
* Immersion chilled. 100 - 25C in 10 minutes
* Wort transferred to fermenting bin through copper pipe in bottom of kettle with holes in. Wort passed through a hop bag to remove trub etc
* Primary ferment for 7 days
* Secondary ferment for 14 days
* Bottle conditioned
The bear is very clear in the bottle, but once in the fridge, cloudy. Does anyone have any ideas for (1) removing the source of the haze in my brew process and/or (2) removing the haze once the proteins etc are (regrettably) in the beer.
Cheers!
John