Big head powder

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yum beer said:
You don't need it.
Throw it away.
Let correct procedure , temperature and sanitising be your head helper.

just for the record, head makes no difference to beers flavour. Best lagers have no head.
From BJCP. These are the best lagers IMHO. All have good head. What do you consider the best lagers?


3A. Vienna Lager
Appearance: Light reddish amber to copper color. Bright clarity. Large, off-white, persistent head.


3B. Oktoberfest
Appearance: Dark gold to deep orange-red color. Bright clarity, with solid, off-white, foam stand


2B. Bohemian Pilsener
Appearance: Very pale gold to deep burnished gold, brilliant to very clear, with a dense, long-lasting, creamy white head.
 
yum beer said:
just for the record, head makes no difference to beers flavour. Best lagers have no head.
somebody please also add to the record there is more to beer than just flavour.

he'll start going on about Urquell now....
 
I thought that was a little odd too. I'd imagine it'd be hard to find a good euro lager without a nice head myself.

Care to expand ??
 
Perhaps big head does not come from a good Lager, maybe an IPA is better?? :p
 
Budvar, IMO the best lager on the market....pours and holds bugger all head. Plenty of others in the same boat, from experience as many without as there is with. And yes Urquell is one of them without.

Was not trying to say that 'all' the best lagers have no head, just pointing out that there are plenty that don't.
 
Gryphon Brewing said:
I know of a Micro that uses this routinely:
Biofoam® is a purified form of propylene glycol alginate (PGA) derived from brown marine algae (Phaeophycaeae) developed and manufactured exclusively for use as a beer foam stabiliser. Its surface-active orientation of the molecule along with other 'foam positive' material (protein, hops and oligosaccharides) not only promotes foam production but also stabilises the foam against collapse by 'foam negative' materials.
Nev
Yumbo. :blink:
 
Yob said:
if you want to make a nice creamy head, even in K&K.. add dry wheat malt, it does fecking wonders for the head of a beer..

Most of the grain bills I use have a component of wheat.. and all the Kits I did had a bit as well..

in fact, SWMBO recently asked me to do a kit brew for her, no grains at all, I put a kilo of DME and a half kilo of Dry Wheat malt in it and it has a lovely lacing head all the way to the bottom of the glass.

:icon_cheers:
+ 1
 
yum beer said:
Budvar, IMO the best lager on the market....pours and holds bugger all head. .
right.

Beer_Budweiser_Budvar_Dark.jpg
 
yum beer said:
Budvar, IMO the best lager on the market....pours and holds bugger all head. Plenty of others in the same boat, from experience as many without as there is with. And yes Urquell is one of them without.

Was not trying to say that 'all' the best lagers have no head, just pointing out that there are plenty that don't.
Well the draught Budějovický Budvar that I regularly drink has a nice head - as does the draught kruscovice and trumer that I've enjoyed many times.

Also had bottled and draught urquell with white moussy head.

Maybe a lot of dirty glassware where you live.
 
Had a glass of Budvar last evening, dumped it straight into a headstart glass.....yes a clean one.....
had a nice head resembling the nice promo shot above for about 1 minute, by mouthfull 3 the head was gone, no lacing...still tasted like tears of an angel.

I don't get why everybody feels the need to defend the head...its a fact of life, not all beer has head and its not always the fault of the glass.
 
I had 3 cans of bud in pint glasses this afternoon and all had head formation and retention. It's not about defending head (although I like it) it's that statements like 'best lagers have no head' are sheer bollocks.
 
Sorry to have caused such as stir, all I was trying to do was give some reassurance to a new brewer that he didn't need to worry about head on his brews.

It seems a poorly worded and probably rushed statement has caused a lot more drama than was ever intended.

As a side Manticle; how does the Budvar in the can compare to the bottled product, it seems to be cheaper to buy in cans...not that I get that chance too often.
Where do you get draft, may need to chase one in Melbourne when there next.
 
yum beer said:
As a side Manticle; how does the Budvar in the can compare to the bottled product, it seems to be cheaper to buy in cans...not that I get that chance too often.
Where do you get draft, may need to chase one in Melbourne when there next.
I've found most of the euro cans I've tried to be quite good - definitely fresher tasting than bottled. Same with the budvar. I do get more corn/dms from budvar than other czech pilsners and this remains in the canned variety.

Beer deluxe has had it on tap for a while - at $11 a pint, I think it is probably too good a seller for them to take out of rotation any time soon (especially with this weather). There is also a czech slovak restaurant in Collingwood which used to be called Koliba and is now called taste of Europe. I haven't been since they changed the name (still focused on Eastern European cuisine and I think still same owners) but they had budvar and Kruscovice on tap - 250, 500 or 1000mL for not a lot of money.

I walked past a czech/slovak place in North Melbourne the other day that I hope to check (pun not intentional) out soon. I'm guessing they might have it too.
 

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