As per the title.. I brewed a beer recent which I have brewed many times over the last couple of decades, just a typical style brown ale, mix of marris otter and various crystals.
I've never bothered with any finings in previous brews as it always tastes like it should and a cloudy beer for this style to me at least seems to be normal.
Anyhow, last time I was at the LBS they had an offer on some carrageenan extract which according to the packet can be used as an Irish moss substitute according to the packet, 1 tsp of this white powder per 5 gallon 15 mins before end of boil. So I bought it and tried it in this batch of ale just to see what difference a clear beer would make.
Brew went normally using my standard equipment, fermented with S-04 which is usually very fast and flocculates like a champ.
This brew has been sitting for about two weeks after finishing at the target FG. the sample i took from near the top seemed very clear and good flavour, all looked well.
Come to bottle it today and there is just so much dark brown jelly like yeast type gunk floating in it it is hard to fill a bottle without getting at least a couple of teaspoons worth of the jelly like goop in it, even racking it back and forth a few times which is probably detrimental to the beer with oxidisation etc but by this point I was willing to try anything.
So what went wrong? Could too much of that extract have caused the issue? It tastes fine so I don't think any wild strains of yeast got to it.
If I had a fridge big enough to fit the fermenter in (10 gallon) i'd have tried cold crashing it but in the end I just tossed it out as it was too much hassle to try and bottle it.
Also apart from trying a fridge (which i dont have anything big enough to fit it in anyway) is there anything else I could have done to try and save it?
Tempted to run another smaller batch as an experiment but would be nice to know what happened.
I've never bothered with any finings in previous brews as it always tastes like it should and a cloudy beer for this style to me at least seems to be normal.
Anyhow, last time I was at the LBS they had an offer on some carrageenan extract which according to the packet can be used as an Irish moss substitute according to the packet, 1 tsp of this white powder per 5 gallon 15 mins before end of boil. So I bought it and tried it in this batch of ale just to see what difference a clear beer would make.
Brew went normally using my standard equipment, fermented with S-04 which is usually very fast and flocculates like a champ.
This brew has been sitting for about two weeks after finishing at the target FG. the sample i took from near the top seemed very clear and good flavour, all looked well.
Come to bottle it today and there is just so much dark brown jelly like yeast type gunk floating in it it is hard to fill a bottle without getting at least a couple of teaspoons worth of the jelly like goop in it, even racking it back and forth a few times which is probably detrimental to the beer with oxidisation etc but by this point I was willing to try anything.
So what went wrong? Could too much of that extract have caused the issue? It tastes fine so I don't think any wild strains of yeast got to it.
If I had a fridge big enough to fit the fermenter in (10 gallon) i'd have tried cold crashing it but in the end I just tossed it out as it was too much hassle to try and bottle it.
Also apart from trying a fridge (which i dont have anything big enough to fit it in anyway) is there anything else I could have done to try and save it?
Tempted to run another smaller batch as an experiment but would be nice to know what happened.