HomeBrewDan
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- Joined
- 21/2/11
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Well after 12 months of struggling with my beer making I'm nearly at the point of giving it away.
I have been experiencing, what I now believe, must be infection after infection. If I try to describe the infection it would be this:- It almost smells bitter! I know that sounds silly but you can smell the sourness to it. Then to taste it there is little to no hop character and a lot of bitterness. Now being a pale ale with loads of hops I should be able to smell or taste them and I can't.
Here is what I have tried over the last year!
- Different recipes. I've tried basic recipes and advanced ones. Mostly recipes that I have done in the past with success. Most turn out bad. Some really bad, others mildly bad. It does seem that if I make a more robust beer like a stout or porter it turns out OK!! But I haven't made a lot of them over the year. Mostly pale ales.
- I have replaced ALL my gear that is plastic and only kept the stainless stuff.
- I buy most of my stuff through Brewcraft in Clayton. I usually use one of there "kit converters" and add it a can to suit. The cans have varied, as have the kit converters.
- I usually use safale yeasts.
- I use Brewshield to sanitize my gear
- I use Brewclean to clean my gear
I'm using the same cleaning process that I have for years prior to having these issues.
What I'm after is some advice on where to start in order to find the issue?
I have spoken with the guys at Brewcraft and Grape and Grain and neither have given me any direction. Most just say "it could be this" or "it could be that" and after spending approx $1000 on gear and ingredients I'm sick of "could be" statements.
I thought it might be due to some issues with ingredients due to the fact I've bought them from the same spot for years. So I tried to brew a LCPA replica based on some awesome reviews on an earlier post. But after a week in the fermenter its tasting quite ordinary. So I'm still left wondering and extremely frustrated!
Is there a series of tests I can perform to find out what's happening?
I am very passionate about my beer making and have even booked in to one of Vincent Costanzo's advanced courses, as I want to step up to all grain. But if I cant even make a decent extract beer, what good is going to all grain.
Cheers for any advice guys!
Dan
I have been experiencing, what I now believe, must be infection after infection. If I try to describe the infection it would be this:- It almost smells bitter! I know that sounds silly but you can smell the sourness to it. Then to taste it there is little to no hop character and a lot of bitterness. Now being a pale ale with loads of hops I should be able to smell or taste them and I can't.
Here is what I have tried over the last year!
- Different recipes. I've tried basic recipes and advanced ones. Mostly recipes that I have done in the past with success. Most turn out bad. Some really bad, others mildly bad. It does seem that if I make a more robust beer like a stout or porter it turns out OK!! But I haven't made a lot of them over the year. Mostly pale ales.
- I have replaced ALL my gear that is plastic and only kept the stainless stuff.
- I buy most of my stuff through Brewcraft in Clayton. I usually use one of there "kit converters" and add it a can to suit. The cans have varied, as have the kit converters.
- I usually use safale yeasts.
- I use Brewshield to sanitize my gear
- I use Brewclean to clean my gear
I'm using the same cleaning process that I have for years prior to having these issues.
What I'm after is some advice on where to start in order to find the issue?
I have spoken with the guys at Brewcraft and Grape and Grain and neither have given me any direction. Most just say "it could be this" or "it could be that" and after spending approx $1000 on gear and ingredients I'm sick of "could be" statements.
I thought it might be due to some issues with ingredients due to the fact I've bought them from the same spot for years. So I tried to brew a LCPA replica based on some awesome reviews on an earlier post. But after a week in the fermenter its tasting quite ordinary. So I'm still left wondering and extremely frustrated!
Is there a series of tests I can perform to find out what's happening?
I am very passionate about my beer making and have even booked in to one of Vincent Costanzo's advanced courses, as I want to step up to all grain. But if I cant even make a decent extract beer, what good is going to all grain.
Cheers for any advice guys!
Dan