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Can you explain? Surface area of what?but it is the surface area to volume ratio that matters.
Can you explain? Surface area of what?but it is the surface area to volume ratio that matters.
It fundamentally will in respect to the first half of that statement. Oxidation is part of the staling process in most things. Browning of fruit or the decanting of wine. That's why NEIPA breweries purge all vessels and piping with CO2 when packaging.If the result risks oxidation - well I've never tasted it.
And many of them irrelevant answers to a completely different questionEvery brewing question will have several different answers all of them right and all of them wrong to someone.
That's down to the quality of the question. The problem is with posing the question to get the answer you want, not asking the questions to get the answer you need.And many of them irrelevant answers to a completely different question
Sure: apologies if I was a bit cryptic. What I meant was that if you ignore effects like temperature, the rate at which oxygen is absorbed into a container of liquid (e.g. in terms of mg oxygen per litre per sec), depends primarily on the surface area of the liquid exposed to the air. That rate will reduce as the liquid becomes saturated with oxygen, but it's true early on.Can you explain? Surface area of what?
But NIEPAs weren't, and the thread specifically relates to replicating a beer style that originates from being brewed on industrial scale systems.Let's remember that excellent beer has been made for decades and centuries without the process methods encouraged today. Many of which are pulled down from industrial scale systems.
Thank you. I was indeed intending to discuss the second, not the first (which has been discussed many times).It seems to me there are two separate issues here: oxidation and "stratification". Starting with the second.
I see what you're saying @An Ankoù and I'm no expert on hop flavours, but I think they might be esters and alcohols, not oils... e.g. see: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/270884543_Flavor_compounds_contributing_to_the_characteristic_flavor_of_new_aroma_hop_cultivars#readHop essential oils are not soluble in water but probably partly or wholly soluble in alcohol.
Speaking entirely of personal preference (and not trying to convince anyone else) but I 100% agree, and my observations here are on the same basisI don't brew or drink NEIPAs; they're not what I call beer, but I see a lot here and elsewhere and I certainly interested from a theoretical point of view.
Technically interesting, but otherwise a bit bland and one dimensional to drink, and thats when they are made well. The homebrew ones that have been, have all been made by people who have committed to ensuring their kit can do closed transfers and force carbonation, in my experience.Speaking entirely of personal preference (and not trying to convince anyone else) but I 100% agree, and my observations here are on the same basis
I assume your grain bill will include reddybrek?Just to be thoroughly bad, I'm going to knock one up with open fermentation in a Yorkshire square, bottle it in old, clear Irn Bru bottles and dry hop it with Vimto.
You won't get the correct flavour profile with Vimto. Original Um bongo hits all key tropical fruits.Just to be thoroughly bad, I'm going to knock one up with open fermentation in a Yorkshire square, bottle it in old, clear Irn Bru bottles and dry hop it with Vimto.
For the oats? Not 'arf!!!I assume your grain bill will include reddybrek?
Hey Neale,I have a suggestion that doesn't seem to have been mentioned. Might bottle 2, (the one with the fruity flavour), have been filled closer to the top of the bottle than the other bottles? this is easily done when filling from a tap? and it does introduce a variable that hasn't been mentioned.
I know from experience that filling close to the brim of the bottle with hoppy beers will keep the hop character for much longer than filling an inch from the top of the bottle. I did a test on exactly this thats on the forum somewhere, and I have drank bottles over 100 days old that still had most of the hop character remaining. When bottles filled an inch from the top would loose their hop character after much less time. In fact I'm planning a pale ale next so I might do some test bottles to do a long term test with fill heights.
For clarity I fill directly from the FV using a bottling wand, I prime with a pre-prepared sugar solution and a syringe and fill to around 5mm from the top of the bottle.
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