Hi hoppyscotty, Thanks i will cold crash today.Did you cold crash? I don't add finings and find a good long cold crash clears the beer, so a cold crash for about 4 days, then package into keg and 2 weeks at fridge temps while its carbonating. This will drop out any solids by the time I come to drink it.
Thanks , i normally do kits, this is the 2nd attempt of all grain the 1st one was not as murky as this one but tasted ok. I suppose practice makes perfect.It could be a number of things.
Different yeasts ferment at different rates and a host of other factors affect the time it takes to ferment (temperature, pitch rate, aeration etc). It's possible it hadn't finished fermenting after 14 days and the yeast is still in suspension. Did you take gravity readings?
Any agitation/moving of the fermenter can swirl the yeast back into suspension.
Different yeasts flocculate differently. Some drop out easily, some stay in suspension for ages
As mentioned, finings, cold temperatures and time will allow more yeast to drop out.
I would probably take a gravity reading, then do one after 24/48 hours to confirm it's finished. Possibly add some finings carefully once done, taking care to get as little oxygen in as possible, but many (including me) skip this step. Then leave it undisturbed in as cool a place as you can for a few days to a week. Bottle when clear
Or learn to not be worried by haze and accept it for what it is! If it's a hefeweizen or witbier, it should look like that!
If it's all grain, then there is a chance that the murkiness is starch haze. If (for whatever reason) the mash didn't completely convert the starches to sugars, this could lead the starch being present in the final beer and it never clearing. A simple iodine test (google is your friend) can confirm this.this is the 2nd attempt of all grain the 1st one was not as murky as this one but tasted ok
Tastes ok happy daysReally hoppy "cold crash" that's gonna need a centrifuge
@Andy44 What does it taste like? Probably won't kill you just to have a small "amuse bouche".
I know I am going to regret this but here goes.If you want a clear product next time you could investigate:
Irish moss (for traditionalists)
Or protofloc.
Pretty much. Protofloc is pelletised Irish moss, adipic acid and bicarb. More convenient to use but otherwise does exactly the sameI know I am going to regret this but here goes.
Are they not both Irish moss, packaged & marketted differently?
Thanks for the info will give it a go next timeIf you want a clear product next time you could investigate:
Irish moss (for traditionalists)
Or protofloc.
You add them 15 minutes before the end of the boil
Thank youIf you normally do kits with no issue, and get clarity issues with all grain, it could be a water issue. Specifically a lack of Calcium.
"Calcium promotes clarity, flavor, and stability in the finished beer. It promotes protein coagulation and yeast flocculation. Calcium additions may be necessary to assure sufficient enzyme activity in the mash if the water is low in calcium."
https://brewingforward.com/wiki/Calcium
If your water source is less than 50mg/l (ppm), then something simple like a teaspoon of Gypsum might be the solution.
That's a very good point. The first drawings from my fermenter via the tap always have trub.By 'poured a drop' do you mean from the tap in your fermenter? Could be that it's got full of trub and that's what you've poured out.
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