MitchDudarko
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 19/8/08
- Messages
- 408
- Reaction score
- 11
Hey all,
My first AG batch was kegged the other day, Dr. Smurto's Golden Ale. After carbing it up, It pours well enough, nice head and all, but its cloudy as all heck (read: Orange Juice), and the flavour is so sweet. First thing that jumped into my mind was Hoegaarden.
A few reasons this could have happened that have popped into my mind are:
1. I didn't have a boil that 'rolled' enough
2. Hopped incorrectly. As I halved the grain bill to do in two smaller batches, I halved the hop schedule. In hindsight, was probably wrong as I can remember reading somewhere that it doesn't necessarily work that way.
3. I pitched S-04. After a week of inactivity and steady SG readings I pitched the only other yeast I had at the time. T-58.
4. I fermented it a little warm. Was moving house, didn't have my fermenting fridge blah blah blah. Haha, so the ferment temp sat at around 24 degrees IIRC.
Anyone else have any ideas?
Cheers
Mitch
My first AG batch was kegged the other day, Dr. Smurto's Golden Ale. After carbing it up, It pours well enough, nice head and all, but its cloudy as all heck (read: Orange Juice), and the flavour is so sweet. First thing that jumped into my mind was Hoegaarden.
A few reasons this could have happened that have popped into my mind are:
1. I didn't have a boil that 'rolled' enough
2. Hopped incorrectly. As I halved the grain bill to do in two smaller batches, I halved the hop schedule. In hindsight, was probably wrong as I can remember reading somewhere that it doesn't necessarily work that way.
3. I pitched S-04. After a week of inactivity and steady SG readings I pitched the only other yeast I had at the time. T-58.
4. I fermented it a little warm. Was moving house, didn't have my fermenting fridge blah blah blah. Haha, so the ferment temp sat at around 24 degrees IIRC.
Anyone else have any ideas?
Cheers
Mitch