Grealish
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2018
- Messages
- 179
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Tasteless lager is a tautology.
Actually, drinking a perfectly pleasant Kölsch made with 50% Vienna, I have to say that was a stupid and obvious thing to say...
Tasteless lager is a tautology.
I think you meant to say 'tasteless lager kit is a tautology' - there, your reputation is saved!drinking a perfectly pleasant Kölsch made with 50% Vienna, I have to say that was a stupid and obvious thing to say
I was doing a set up for "It's a tasteless lager" but I've realise that would only really work if you could see my one raised eyebrow and heard my stupid voice. Sorry.Saying the same thing twice.
This bloke knows how to do it.I've had reasonable success with Coopers lager kits, both European and Australian.
- make them up with DME rather than sugar
- brew short 20L vs 23L
- dry hop with a lager hop, 30-50g Saaz or Hallertau
- play the log game, leave in the bottles for at least 10 weeks before drinking
No. And seriously for a change, lager kits are genuinely far more tasteless than ale kits, and their anodyne nature is compounded by a sugar addition. For a fancy kit it might not be the case but for so many of the lager kits out there they are like.... blandness. Can you make up some bland and put it in a can, please, with 0.3g of them German hops?Surely most of this thread issue on lager kits being "tasteless" can be mirrored to pretty much any ale kit that uses sugar instead of DME\LME
Well, yesI had a taste and it was very tasteless.
- it's tasteless because it is a lager!Tasteless lager is a tautology.
Well, yes
- it's tasteless because it is a lager!
There's many different types of lager of course and to be called a lager generally just requires that it be fermented cold with a lager yeast strain, and then lagered... i.e. stored cold for an unacceptably long period of time! Some lager styles are intended to be low on flavour with the emphasis being more on the clean and crisp aspect of the beer. At the other extreme you have the likes of schwarzbier - a black lager with noticeable chocolate, coffee and roasted type flavours.
As said in the past, when getting back into home brewing I was sold on a sample bottle of a Bavarian Blonde pilsener style in the local home brew shop. And even though I buggered the brew up somewhat it was still drinkable. Maybe there is a difference between "lager" & "pilsner" or other such styles of beer that could loosely come under the marker of a lager I don't know?. But maybe the fact that some kits come with far more that the standard 1.5\1.8kg of liguid malt and thus adds more depth & flavour than cheaper lager kits do or at least indicate like most kits that adding DME\LME really makes the difference with the finished product.
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