Doctormcbrewdle
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Dude, we can grow about 3 different plants in Darwin, and unfortunately hops aint one if em'
Peter Wolfes thesis on hop flavours will explain a lot if you google it. Here is an extract off Braukaiser's extract of the findings.
1.6.1 Packaging and its potential ability to scalp dry-hop flavor: “The hydrophobic nature of hop aroma compounds makes them vulnerable to adsorption and absorption by hydrophobic polymers”. The most common occurrence of this is in cap liners. The extent depends on the type of polymer. In one study mycrene and humulene were found to have completely migrated into the cap liners of examined retail beers. This is an interesting aspect to those of us who bottle beers and don’t pay much attention to the type of bottle cap we are using.
Here is the rest of the blog
http://braukaiser.com/blog/blog/2012/12/12/interesting-paper-on-dry-hopping/
I'm trying too! It is the search for the Holy Grail. Although I have been satisfied with my latest techniques. Its the ingredients as well as the technique. Its so many points of process. Brew geek science.
Darwin? Fark me. I guess you only have the higher temp yeasts recipes to deal with unless you have some underground cellar, fermentation chambers for cooler temp control etc.
1.6.1 Packaging and its potential ability to scalp dry-hop flavor: “The hydrophobic nature of hop aroma compounds makes them vulnerable to adsorption and absorption by hydrophobic polymers”. The most common occurrence of this is in cap liners. The extent depends on the type of polymer. In one study mycrene and humulene were found to have completely migrated into the cap liners of examined retail beers. This is an interesting aspect to those of us who bottle beers and don’t pay much attention to the type of bottle cap we are using.
Here is the rest of the blog
http://braukaiser.com/blog/blog/2012/12/12/interesting-paper-on-dry-hopping/
I'm not a massive fan of stupidly hop forward beers but 300 ppm seems much too high to me. I'd aim for 150 - 200 max and that's presuming mash pH is taken care of.
One controlled experiment that touches on sulphate and hop flavour (not aroma) found a statistically significant but not very large negative correlation (-0.44 slope, .05 confidence interval)..
Van Havig, Maximizing Hop Flavor and Aroma through Process Variables, MBAA Tech Quarterly 47(2), 2009.
I wonder if this is actually true about the liner? I'd imagine it's actually oxygen instead but, I just don't know for sure yet
As for bottling, I am a bottler, try using citric acid in the mash and sparge, it's helped me and I deduce its because it's a good anti oxidant.
Log Kow for Myrcene is 4.33, so the myrcene in 500 ml of beer would reach equilibrium with ~10 mg of a linear alkane*, eg the total quantity of myrcene would be split equally between the two.
Assuming the liner weighs at least a gram, more than 99% of the myrcene would eventually end up in it. How long this takes is another matter.
* the standard is octane but polythene would have the same effect.
Citric acid has very limited antioxidant poperties, I would not have thought it functioned as an antixodidant in wort. Did you mean ascorbic acid?
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