MmmBeer
Brewer
Last night I drew off a sample of a best bitter, which I kegged about a week ago and when I tasted it, I noticed an odd off flavour. After a few more sniffs and tastes it began to remind me of the aroma of milk, I have noticed this in a beer a few years ago, when I had used Lactic acid to remove alkalinity and had probably used too much. Checking the recipe, I used 10ml AMS in the mash and 10ml in the sparge, however when brewing this beer, I opened a new batch of AMS. This AMS was part of an order from a major supplier, added in to counter the shipping costs, and it had arrived in plastic screwtop tubes with hadwritten labels rather than a proper printed bottle.
So now I am wondering, is it really AMS in those tubes, or could it be Lactic acid? Is there a simple way to differentiate between the two without needing full lab facilities? Alternatively it could have been an infection with a bacteria that produced Lactic acid.
I am planning to brew again in the next few days, so I will probably work on the basis that it is Lactic and therefore use in much smaller quantities, well below the taste threshold and will probably amend the recipe to make it a somewhat darker colour and reduce alkalinity naturally.
So now I am wondering, is it really AMS in those tubes, or could it be Lactic acid? Is there a simple way to differentiate between the two without needing full lab facilities? Alternatively it could have been an infection with a bacteria that produced Lactic acid.
I am planning to brew again in the next few days, so I will probably work on the basis that it is Lactic and therefore use in much smaller quantities, well below the taste threshold and will probably amend the recipe to make it a somewhat darker colour and reduce alkalinity naturally.