Khellendros13
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 25/2/13
- Messages
- 166
- Reaction score
- 22
I have noticed this for a while now. The majority of filtered beers I have tasted, have a distinct chemical like flavour. Most prominent in filtered pale ales.
This Hawthorn Brewery Pale Ale is the latest.
It is less noticeable in darker beers, but I get it in Coopers Sparkling and Pale Ale, and numerous others. The Iron Maiden beer is another example.
In highly hopped styles like an IPA or IIPA I guess this would be hidden, but not in all that I have tried. Less hop aroma/flavour/character makes it easier to pick out this "filtered" flavour.
It is such a distinct flavour I can pick if a new beer I am trying is filtered, or at best I am not sure.
S&W Pacific Ale I like a lot...and it isn't filtered. I also can't find this taste in any SN beer...I research and they are filtered by centrifuge.
So, my thoughts are that the standard filter process removes certain flavours/compounds that then let this chemical like taste shine through?
Anyone else notice this? All my research points to filtering improving taste...but not in my tasting experience.
This Hawthorn Brewery Pale Ale is the latest.
It is less noticeable in darker beers, but I get it in Coopers Sparkling and Pale Ale, and numerous others. The Iron Maiden beer is another example.
In highly hopped styles like an IPA or IIPA I guess this would be hidden, but not in all that I have tried. Less hop aroma/flavour/character makes it easier to pick out this "filtered" flavour.
It is such a distinct flavour I can pick if a new beer I am trying is filtered, or at best I am not sure.
S&W Pacific Ale I like a lot...and it isn't filtered. I also can't find this taste in any SN beer...I research and they are filtered by centrifuge.
So, my thoughts are that the standard filter process removes certain flavours/compounds that then let this chemical like taste shine through?
Anyone else notice this? All my research points to filtering improving taste...but not in my tasting experience.