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04-20-2011, 12:54 AM
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#1
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Louisville, Kentucky
Posts: 231
Liked 5 Times on 4 Posts Likes Given: 1
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Anyway to fix a overly sweet beer?
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Brewed an amber ale a year ago that's too sweet to enjoy and still have about 4 gallons left in a keg. I think the hop schedule was wrong or the alpha acids were listed incorrect.
I'm about to dump it but before I do thought I'd ask if there is any better use for it, or way to amend it?
__________________
Fermenting: Cream Ale
Secondary/Lagering:Nada
Bottled: Am. Amber, ESB, Oatmeal Stout, Old 7 Mile Pike Saison, JC Dubbel, Behemoth Imperial Stout, Garden Variety Brown, Jekyll Oktoberfests, Wee Heavy Scotch Ale, Lefty Vienna Lager, Munich Dunkel, Hefeweizen, Sm. Barleywine, Sm. Porter, Dunkelweizen & Helles Bock
Kegged: MLK Occupator, Trippel, JSC ESB & RyePA
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04-20-2011, 01:45 AM
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#2
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Cleveland
Posts: 482
Liked 7 Times on 6 Posts Likes Given: 11
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if its still around after a year, just dump it and move on.
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04-20-2011, 01:49 AM
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#3
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Posts: 583
Liked 10 Times on 8 Posts Likes Given: 4
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Three ideas:
1) Throw a party. It's free beer, and people would be jerks to throw it out.
2) Cook with it. Amber ale is my go-to beer for a lot of cooking needs. How can you complain about fish and chips, onion rings, ribs, or beer cheese?
3) Use it in the garden. Dilute beer makes a decent fertilizer. Though for four gallons, you better have several acres of land.
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04-20-2011, 01:50 AM
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#4
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: OH
Posts: 1,547
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4 gallons, huh? That's a lot to waste. If I had an empty carboy, I'd rack it in there and pitch some dregs from a few soured beers, but that's just me. If you're not into the whole sour thing, I might just move on as well. It's not going to get any less sweet as the years go by. There's always more beer to be made.
Edit: another thought is to dry hop the hell out of it in the keg. It might get you a better beer, but it might also waste a bunch of hops. Life's full of risks, I suppose.
Or just use it as drunk beer. Serve it to people (yourself included) who are already a bit tipsy. It won't be too sweet then, it'll just be more alcohol.
__________________
Don't worry, be hoppy.
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04-20-2011, 01:52 AM
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#5
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: grand rapids, michigan
Posts: 198
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get a small strainer and put some fresh hops in it and pour your beer over the hops before you drink it
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04-20-2011, 01:57 AM
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#6
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,772
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Just for the sake of discussion. Why is it overly sweet? Recipe problem? No starter? Sugar starter? Fermented too cold? Racked too soon? I just would like to know so when people ask if they have to do things, I can link here. Selfish ain't I?
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04-20-2011, 02:33 AM
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#7
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Memphis, TN
Posts: 584
Liked 14 Times on 12 Posts
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add some beano to that b*tch!
__________________
-Sometimes I feel like I'm up beer creek without a pint glass-
-May the IBU's be with you-
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04-20-2011, 02:37 AM
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#8
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Whats Under Your Kilt
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Taylorsville, Utah
Posts: 1,622
Liked 62 Times on 52 Posts Likes Given: 42
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isomerized hop extract... its like a couple drops add 10 IBU's to a finnished beer...
__________________
Quote:
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Originally Posted by cadarnell
'how will i explain this to my kids' ... if i have to ask that, then i think my kids are in trouble ... just my 2 cents ... HAVE A BEER !!!
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Father of 4 girls
Suffers from Zymocenosilicaphobia
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04-20-2011, 10:40 AM
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#9
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Feedback Score: 0 reviews
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Louisville, Kentucky
Posts: 231
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Quote:
Originally Posted by onthekeg
Just for the sake of discussion. Why is it overly sweet? Recipe problem? No starter? Sugar starter? Fermented too cold? Racked too soon? I just would like to know so when people ask if they have to do things, I can link here. Selfish ain't I?
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Pretty sure the hop schedule was off, or the hops weren't the AA advertised. Everything else seemed to be on target.
Good thought on the sour. Think I'll rack some to a 3 gallon carboy and give that a try. The rest I can dry hop with some homegrown Cascades and see if its worth drinking afterwards.
__________________
Fermenting: Cream Ale
Secondary/Lagering:Nada
Bottled: Am. Amber, ESB, Oatmeal Stout, Old 7 Mile Pike Saison, JC Dubbel, Behemoth Imperial Stout, Garden Variety Brown, Jekyll Oktoberfests, Wee Heavy Scotch Ale, Lefty Vienna Lager, Munich Dunkel, Hefeweizen, Sm. Barleywine, Sm. Porter, Dunkelweizen & Helles Bock
Kegged: MLK Occupator, Trippel, JSC ESB & RyePA
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04-20-2011, 04:01 PM
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#10
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 447
Liked 4 Times on 4 Posts
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What I did when my barleywine was too sweet was basically make an over-hopped starter. I used a cup of DME with just about a gallon of water, boiled it plus hops I used in the previous recipe. The numbers came out to about an OG of 1.05 (so the gravity wouldn't drop too much), ~85 IBUs @ 60 % ~40 IBUs @ 15 for more hop taste, and let the whole thing ferment out (you can top crop or rack out a yeast sample if you don't want to use new yeast. Once its all fermented add to your original beer and let it settle for a few days to help it meld together. Fixed my beer perfectly, hopefully it will give you something drinkable! Good luck dude.
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