Braufather
Landlord.
I know a lot of us have lamented on the beautifull but far too short lived hop aroma from some of our brews, where for a week it’s amazing and better than anything available commercially but after that week it’s all but gone.
Generally my beers are ready at week 5 or 6, and from there whilst malt foward beers get better, I have about a week to enjoy the hop bombs before they fade off.
Any ideas how to preserve that aroma for longer?
If at peak hop aroma, conditioned and carbonated beers were transferred to purged bottles with a beer gun, purged and capped, would those bottles hold aroma better than a keg that loses aroma over time with each poor? Or would it not make a difference?
Could you bottle the fully conditioned and carbonated beer from the keg via a hop rocket?
I’m not sure if the beers become unbalanced after the aroma disappears, or if its just a case knowing what you are missing, but it certainly means a beer loses its edge.
Professional bottled beer and canned keeps its aroma so there must be a solution here.
Thoughts People?
Generally my beers are ready at week 5 or 6, and from there whilst malt foward beers get better, I have about a week to enjoy the hop bombs before they fade off.
Any ideas how to preserve that aroma for longer?
If at peak hop aroma, conditioned and carbonated beers were transferred to purged bottles with a beer gun, purged and capped, would those bottles hold aroma better than a keg that loses aroma over time with each poor? Or would it not make a difference?
Could you bottle the fully conditioned and carbonated beer from the keg via a hop rocket?
I’m not sure if the beers become unbalanced after the aroma disappears, or if its just a case knowing what you are missing, but it certainly means a beer loses its edge.
Professional bottled beer and canned keeps its aroma so there must be a solution here.
Thoughts People?