mtb
Beer Bod
- Joined
- 5/1/16
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Lately I've been looking into why my pale ale hop flavours are consistently poor, despite using the same recipe/hop source/malt source as a brewer friend. His beers turn out great but my hoppier ales just taste.. well, stale. It's not an infection as it doesn't taste bad per se, it simply doesn't have that hop flavour that one hopes to achieve.
One maybe concerning difference between my brewing methods and that of my brewer friend are that he secures his glad wrap on the FV with a rubber band and a tiny tube to allow CO2 exhaust, while I simply screw on the lid part-way to prevent anything drifting into the FV. We both ferment in sealed fermentation fridges but I open mine every couple of days to take a hydrometer reading or salivate over the krausen, so air is being circulated. *edit: I open my fridge every couple of days, not the FV.
Could I be causing my beer to go stale in the PFV by exposing it to oxygen? I was under the impression that a "blanket" of CO2 would protect it but now I'm not so sure.
One maybe concerning difference between my brewing methods and that of my brewer friend are that he secures his glad wrap on the FV with a rubber band and a tiny tube to allow CO2 exhaust, while I simply screw on the lid part-way to prevent anything drifting into the FV. We both ferment in sealed fermentation fridges but I open mine every couple of days to take a hydrometer reading or salivate over the krausen, so air is being circulated. *edit: I open my fridge every couple of days, not the FV.
Could I be causing my beer to go stale in the PFV by exposing it to oxygen? I was under the impression that a "blanket" of CO2 would protect it but now I'm not so sure.