Mr. No-Tip
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It feels like I am doing a series in ridiculous questions, but here goes....
About a month ago I filtered and kegged a Kolsch. The clarity was brilliant. Now a few weeks later, the clarity is...good at best. I am trying to figure out what has changed.
Here are some of the facts:
I've not really touched it for a few weeks, but the following things happened during that time, though I can't see a reason they would affect the filtered clarity:
...sure it's a different glass, and a slightly different lighting, making the beer look darker, but it is the same dog in the same spot, and that's the point. Before I could read a bible's fineprint through the beer...now I'd struggle with the large print books section. It's by no means cloudy, but were I judging this beer, I'd call the clarity 'ok to good' whereaes before it was 'brilliant'.
It's not chill haze. The beer was served colder earlier on, and it does not clear with warmth.
I wonder if it could be some refermentation? Perhaps I kegged it slightly under attenuated and the few days close to ten degrees have caused the yeast to get their caper on again?
Any other ideas?
About a month ago I filtered and kegged a Kolsch. The clarity was brilliant. Now a few weeks later, the clarity is...good at best. I am trying to figure out what has changed.
Here are some of the facts:
- Fermented using the White Labs Kolsch yeast.
- Crash chilled for a few days after hitting FG.
- Filtered and kegged.
- Took this photo on day 1 (yes, I have club/murderer's/megan fox thumbs):
I've not really touched it for a few weeks, but the following things happened during that time, though I can't see a reason they would affect the filtered clarity:
- The fridge may have gone back as high as 9c for a day or two following a power outage.
- A small amount of unboiled water may have gotten sucked in through the gasline as I was force carbing some soda water.
...sure it's a different glass, and a slightly different lighting, making the beer look darker, but it is the same dog in the same spot, and that's the point. Before I could read a bible's fineprint through the beer...now I'd struggle with the large print books section. It's by no means cloudy, but were I judging this beer, I'd call the clarity 'ok to good' whereaes before it was 'brilliant'.
It's not chill haze. The beer was served colder earlier on, and it does not clear with warmth.
I wonder if it could be some refermentation? Perhaps I kegged it slightly under attenuated and the few days close to ten degrees have caused the yeast to get their caper on again?
Any other ideas?