I'm not sure H. The recipe has oats and lots of hops in - on my understanding even a sniff of oxygen would ruin it. We will have to see how long it lasts. It's supposed to be around 10 EBC but looks more like 14 to me.
They are certainly factors that make beer more prone to oxidation. I’m assuming there’s quite a big dry hop - does he use leaf or pellet?I'm not sure H. The recipe has oats and lots of hops in - on my understanding even a sniff of oxygen would ruin it. We will have to see how long it lasts. It's supposed to be around 10 EBC but looks more like 14 to me.
Pellet is better for the dry hop because you get air trapped between the leaves that can oxidise beer - I wondered if this might be a contributory factor. Not if you use pellet.Always pellets. We haven't tried leaf yet but we keep meaning to.
Just checked the recipe - 100g dry hop, so not as big as I thought.
Little booster after a heavy night yesterday before game timeGame time @dave_77
One of my fav breweriesView attachment 57239
Salt North South Divide 7.4%
Just a lovely hoppy hazy IPA and surprised how reasonable price wise Salt are (for this kind of beer).
I really enjoyed that one, very sessionable I would saySteigl ‘Columbus’
Quite a surprise and very nice too. Sort of a sophisticated take on a US style IPA but with a good noble hop character, anchored by a restrained slightly lemony acidity.
I’d recommend this if you can track it down.
View attachment 57240
I only use pellets and just bung them in, so I guess some poor sucker is going to get some fowl oxidised beer from me in the "Secret Santa" -Pellet is better for the dry hop because you get air trapped between the leaves that can oxidise beer - I wondered if this might be a contributory factor. Not if you use pellet.
I recently experimented with mash hopping as a mechanism for reducing oxidation. In the American Ales competition I entered my Pilgrim Ale and it came 2nd despite being highly hopped and three months old. It was the beer I’d experimented on with mash hopping and I can’t say for sure but there might be something in it.
Try adding 1-2g / litre of high alpha-acid hops in your mash. It adds virtually no bitterness and does add hop flavour despite the boil. The theory is that the alpha acids have changed into different compounds that are less volatile and don’t isomerise to anything like the same degree. They also “complex” metal ions which would otherwise make it into the final product and are pro-oxidative.
May be worth a punt?
Pellets are good in the dry hop, leaves not so much.I only use pellets and just bung them in, so I guess some poor sucker is going to get some fowl oxidised beer from me in the "Secret Santa" -
If you saw my bottling technique you would need a paramedic armed with a defribulater to hand as well
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