First brew lovely and clear then went cloudy

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Quinny

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Just brewed my first beer. Took some time to condition in 2l plastic bottles, but went lovely and clear in my warm brewing box.

Put first bottle in fridge and drank it that day, absolutely lovely. Clear as a bell, and tasted beautiful. Nice head and remainder even had a head following morning. Left the other bottles in Garage quite (cold) and another one in fridge.

They've all now gone cloudy and pressure in bottles has gone down.

Can someone explain what's happened please?
 
Sounds like chill haze, as far as the cloudiness.

As to the pressure, were these new 2 liter bottles, or are you re-using old soda bottles?

If you are using soda bottles, you may be getting some CO2 leaks around the cap. Also, chilling will reduce the apparent pressure a bit.
 
+ 1 on the chill haze, also on the pressure dropping a bit when chilled, CO2 dissolves easier in colder fluids. :)
 
Chill Haze - whats that?

How to Brew - By John Palmer - Cooling the Wort

Rapid cooling also forms the Cold Break. This is composed of another group of proteins that need to be thermally shocked into precipitating out of the wort. Slow cooling will not affect them. Cold break, or rather the lack of it, is the cause of Chill Haze. When a beer is chilled for drinking, these proteins partially precipitate forming a haze. As the beer warms up, the proteins re-dissolve. Only by rapid chilling from near-boiling to room temperature will the Cold Break proteins permanently precipitate and not cause Chill Haze. Chill haze is usually regarded as a cosmetic problem. You cannot taste it. However, chill haze indicates that there is an appreciable level of cold-break-type protein in the beer, which has been linked to long-term stability problems. Hazy beer tends to become stale sooner than non-hazy beer.
 
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