Some time ago I did some tests to see if using oxygen scavenging caps made any perceivable difference to a NEIPA and then to a session IPA or if just filling very close to the brim is enough. (see above).
Some time after doing these tests I made an IPA and bottled one bottle using a standard cap but filling to approximately 5mm from the top of the bottle with the intention of leaving it for a while to see if any noticeable oxidisation happens.
Well after 279 days in the bottle it looks like the picture below. The bottle has been stored in a fridge for the entire time and when poured it looked like it did when it was bottled. I don't think there are any visual signs of oxidation.
Taste wise, it was brewed using Lallemand Kveik yeast so always had that tangerine taste from the yeast which it still has in abundance and is as I remember it from the other bottles. I think it has probably lost a bit of the hoppy fruitiness that it had when it was younger but thats to be expected after this long.
There are no off flavours that I can detect and certainly no wet cardboard taste and its still a very pleasant beer to drink.
So do we need to use oxygen scavenging caps, maybe, maybe not. I do usually use oxy caps because why not as extra insurance, but it doesn't appear to have had a negative effect on this beer to use standard caps. I think this points again to the easiest way to reduce oxidation in bottled beer is to reduce the headspace.
Another test.....
I have recently made a pale ale with necatron hops. I have bottled three test bottles, two using ascorbic acid, (which I have never used before), and one without ascorbic acid that I will keep as a control sample. I intend on leaving these for a long time to see if there is any difference. I will post the results when I eventually open them. They are all bottled with oxy caps and are all filled to 5mm from the brim so the only thing on test is if the ascorbic acid makes a difference to retaining hops aroma and flavour.
On a side note I have used bottles that are 215ml for these tests, if you need any they came from the Harry Potter studio and originally contained 'Butter Beer', my daughter is a fan. The butter beer is carbonated and the bottles take a standard cap so are ideal for test bottles. You'll need a sweet tooth if you want to drink the butter beer yourself though....
279 day old IPA