Don't Oxidize Your Brew

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Batz

Batz Brewery...Hand crafted beers from the 'Batcav
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Been told , read , don't oxidize your brew
Talking after fermenting of course , well what happens if I do?
Was racking a brew the other day , careful racking tube all the way to the bottom of racking fermenter , wife said what you doing?
Racking a brew dear , got to be careful not to oxidize it , well she asks , why what will happen ?
mmmm Well I know it won't be good , in fact it's bad !


So what will happen?
Won't blow up will it she asked , not if I am careful I said

So what does it do? :blink: :ph34r: :blink: :unsure:
 
Batz
Those articles describe the small changes to yeast and beer with prolonged contact with oxygen, which I think are mostly related to partial oxidation of alcohol to aldehydes.

If you are asking what happens if you oxygenate the hell out of a finished beer, maybe let a little bacteria in there as well, the worst case I think is:

CH3CH2OH + O2 ---> CH3COOH + H2O

or
Ethanol (lovely tasting beer with alcohol) plus bad nasty oxygen = acetic acid (vinegar) plus water

ie watery vinegary beer
 
Cardboardy tastes and vinegar etc (Lambics)

Also, the yeast gets excited by the bit of oxygen present, tries to start budding etc, no nutrients--and a beer full of yeast bite.

Aeration after day three is bad, very bad!


Jovial Monk
 
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