toojays
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- 25/3/10
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I made a dark ale which tastes too sweet, and has a flavour which a couple of people have described as "soy sauce". Can anyone suggest what causes this flavour?
What I brewed:
Morgan's Iron Bark Dark Ale can
1.5kg Coopers Amber LME
Nottingham Yeast
2 weeks in primary at room temperature
another week in the same fermenter, but I moved it to the fridge (was going on holiday, so the only time I could get away with abusing the fridge in this way; had just read about "cold crashing" for clarity)
OG 1040
FG 1020
My guess is that maybe the ferment stuck, since these days I'd expect the FG should be a bit lower than 1020. So some unfermented sugars explain why it's too sweet. But why the soy sauce flavour?
This was bottled a year ago, and I haven't had any gushers or bombs, so that counts against the "unfinished fermentation theory". But I did only prime with 1/2 a carbonation drop per stubby.
I get a reasonable beer if I mix 1 part dark ale with 2 parts IPA. Maybe that's a waste of IPA, but I read you've gotta drink your mistakes . . .
What I brewed:
Morgan's Iron Bark Dark Ale can
1.5kg Coopers Amber LME
Nottingham Yeast
2 weeks in primary at room temperature
another week in the same fermenter, but I moved it to the fridge (was going on holiday, so the only time I could get away with abusing the fridge in this way; had just read about "cold crashing" for clarity)
OG 1040
FG 1020
My guess is that maybe the ferment stuck, since these days I'd expect the FG should be a bit lower than 1020. So some unfermented sugars explain why it's too sweet. But why the soy sauce flavour?
This was bottled a year ago, and I haven't had any gushers or bombs, so that counts against the "unfinished fermentation theory". But I did only prime with 1/2 a carbonation drop per stubby.
I get a reasonable beer if I mix 1 part dark ale with 2 parts IPA. Maybe that's a waste of IPA, but I read you've gotta drink your mistakes . . .