+1 for brew and blendOr you could brew another very low IBU beer and blend it.
If you can afford the keg space, then leave it for a few months. The bitterness should start to mellow down. If not, bottle it and stash the bottles away for a good while.
Curious to see was it better for the amount of ibu’s added at the start in relation to how it tasted a year later. What I mean is did it benefit with the amount of hops that mellowed or would less hops/bitterness have resulted in the same taste with less conditioning ?
Several years ago I tried to mask mimic how IPAs were made 200 years ago for a Zymurgy online extra. They were often hopped to high heaven and aged for up to a year before release. On paper I had close to 200 IBUs. It was close to undrinkable at first. I tasted it every month starting in month three. It mellowed a bit every month until it hit nine months when it was pretty good.
I'm pretty sure that if I'd started with 40-50 IBUs and the beer had been ready to bottle after 9 days aging instead of 9 months the resulting beer would have been different. Would it have been better? I couldn't tell you as I brewed the 200 IBU batch for the article and it didn't occur to me to brew it with less IBUs and to compare them.Curious to see was it better for the amount of ibu’s added at the start in relation to how it tasted a year later. What I mean is did it benefit with the amount of hops that mellowed or would less hops/bitterness have resulted in the same taste with less conditioning ?
Salt is sprinkled on sliced aubergines and courgettes before cooking to draw the bitter liquid from them. It is then usual to rinse the salt off before cooking. I don't see how that would work with beer.Table salt may be worth a try. Sodium can counter bitterness, and is often used in cooking on bitter aubergines and courgettes. The chloride may also accentuate malt flavours.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.sciencefocus.com/science/why-does-salt-enhance-flavour/amp/
How about coffee?Salt is sprinkled on sliced aubergines and courgettes before cooking to draw the bitter liquid from them. It is then usual to rinse the salt off before cooking. I don't see how that would work with beer.
Let us know how it goes when you try it.How about coffee?
https://www.homegrounds.co/uk/salt-in-coffee/
https://www.thoughtco.com/does-salt-in-coffee-reduce-bitterness-607366
Given that its an instant, easy and readily accessible potential fix, worth trying? No?
It works. How hard is it to sprinkle some salt into beer. Jesus.Let us know how it goes when you try it.
You said "worth trying? ". You were questioning it. You didn't say you had done it and it works. It is not hard to add salt to beer but it would be good to know how much you added when you did it.It works. How hard is it to sprinkle some salt into beer. Jesus.
It was a one off, to a commercial beer, I didn't make any measurements. I also don't know how bitter the OPs beer is or have their palate. Most people are well accustomed to seasoning with salt, so assumed this wouldn't be necessary. Further to this, if the beer has very high levels of Sulphates, it could potentially go harsher in bitterness. So, worth a try.You said "worth trying? ". You were questioning it. You didn't say you had done it and it works. It is not hard to add salt to beer but it would be good to know how much you added when you did it.
I doubt if many people are accustomed to seasoning beer with salt.It was a one off, to a commercial beer, I didn't make any measurements. I also don't know how bitter the OPs beer is or have their palate. Most people are well accustomed to seasoning with salt, so assumed this wouldn't be necessary. Further to this, if the beer has very high levels of Sulphates, it could potentially go harsher in bitterness. So, worth a try.
I seem to have done it inadvertentlyI doubt if many people are accustomed to seasoning beer with salt.
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