Doctormcbrewdle
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 20/9/17
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Oxygen sucks in through airlock to replace lost liquid
Air replaces the liquid (say 20% oxygen in air) and a hydro sample draws maybe 200ml? So you've introduced 40ml of O2 into the vessel maybe. I wouldn't expect any issues from that.Oxygen sucks in through airlock to replace lost liquid
+1Alright, will leave you to it then.
It doesn't take a genius to know it's probably the heat. Unpasteurized beer at 40 degrees isn't exactly a great recipe for success.
Anyone know of a India lager I can try? Laughs
@MHB wondering what you think. There’s often a throat burn I see in NEIPA’s or heavily late-hopped beers. My guess at the moment is that it comes from using hops higher up on the cohumulone % scale. Whaddaya think?
Mostly its just the gross amount of hop oils, turpins (clue in the name), polyphenols and other hop products that goes into solution.@MHB wondering what you think. There’s often a throat burn I see in NEIPA’s or heavily late-hopped beers. My guess at the moment is that it comes from using hops higher up on the cohumulone % scale. Whaddaya think?
Well, in my hop forward beer the hops completely dissappear within days and my pilsners are fresh abd really great to start with, but turn bad later on.
The taste is hard to describe but I'll do my best. The freshness is completely lost. It's no longer crisp. And there is a strange sherry like flavour attached to the malt. The original greatness just goes down the drain. The pale ale's don't seem to suffer from the malt problems, just hop aroma mainly and hops get muddled/muted, only the pilsners suffer the malt tasting bad
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