nacnud
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 7/9/12
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- 47
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Hi all. I have been brewing for the best part of a decade now but over the last couple of years I have brewed very few beers that I've enjoyed. The problem is a strong sweetness that comes on after kegging or bottling in almost all of my brews. The beer tastes great at the end of fermentation but over the next couple of weeks it develops this thick sweetness that makes it pretty undrinkable.
I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of it. I initially thought it may be diacetyl but there is no sign of it immediately after fermentation and I have been meticulous with my sanitisation so what ever it is seems to be developing at 4 degrees in the keg. I have simplified my brewing down to store bought AG recipes and have tried half bottling and half kegging a brew to see if it's something in the keg or lines but both came out the same. All styles have it, though it's more noticeable in the lighter styles.
After a bit of googling I have found a couple of people describing similar issues but no real explanation. So any suggestions are welcome.
It's really getting me down because I love brewing but I don't know how many more disappointments I can take before I give up entirely.
I brew AG, esky mash tun but have also done BIAB with the same issue. Fermentation is temperature controlled, usually 18 to 20 degrees for an ale and then cold crashed. Straight from primary to 19L kegs after about 2 to 3 weeks usually. Always hitting my FGs. Always tastes good at kegging.
I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of it. I initially thought it may be diacetyl but there is no sign of it immediately after fermentation and I have been meticulous with my sanitisation so what ever it is seems to be developing at 4 degrees in the keg. I have simplified my brewing down to store bought AG recipes and have tried half bottling and half kegging a brew to see if it's something in the keg or lines but both came out the same. All styles have it, though it's more noticeable in the lighter styles.
After a bit of googling I have found a couple of people describing similar issues but no real explanation. So any suggestions are welcome.
It's really getting me down because I love brewing but I don't know how many more disappointments I can take before I give up entirely.
I brew AG, esky mash tun but have also done BIAB with the same issue. Fermentation is temperature controlled, usually 18 to 20 degrees for an ale and then cold crashed. Straight from primary to 19L kegs after about 2 to 3 weeks usually. Always hitting my FGs. Always tastes good at kegging.