Brewing outdoors and light struck

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ILoveBeer2

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I'm sitting outdoors brewing a IIPA while enjoying a Kern River Citra IIPA and realized my beverage is light struck. Not terribly skunky but the flavor is there.

How much risk is there brewing outdoors and the brewing beer being light stuck? I moved the burner to an area of diffused light just in case.
 
Negative. This is not a post fermentation problem it is a post boil problem. That is a very good question. I would have to say the risk is negligible as most of my batches have been outdoors and I have not noticed any skunk.
 
Wiki says post boil so that may be more accurate than post fermentation.

What's the process during fermentation that turns isomerized hop compounds into light sensitive ones?

wiki said:
MBT
(Redirected from Skunk)


MBT is the abbreviation for 3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol, a compound formed by the reaction of isomerized alpha acids, specifically isohumulone, with riboflavin in the presence of certain wavelengths of light. MBT is very similar in chemical composition and odor to the spray of a skunk.
MBT
Contents

1 MBT in Beer
2 Causes of MBT
3 Preventing MBT
4 Creating MBT

MBT in Beer

MBT is not generally considered appropriate in any beer style. However, some brands of lager, notably Heineken, are packaged in such a way that the creation of some amounts of MBT (and therefore skunk flavor and aroma) is almost inevitable. Many beer drinkers, especially in the United States, have come to associate this character with the beer itself and consider it part of the beer's character.

Causes of MBT

MBT is created when wort or beer containing isomerized alpha acids, which are extracted from hops by boiling and contribute bitterness to beer, is exposed to certain wavelengths of ultraviolet and blue visible light. In the presence of light, one iso-alpha acid, isohumulone, reacts with the riboflavin present in wort or beer to form MBT.

Because the reaction is specific to hop acids, mead, wine, and other fermented beverages that do not contain hops may be safely exposed to light.

Preventing MBT

MBT can be prevented by avoiding exposing wort or beer to the relevant wavelengths of light after the completion of the boil. Sunlight skunks beer faster than other kinds of light, and fluorescent light is also a problem; incandescent light contains less of the relevant wavelengths of light. Beer stored in clear, blue, or green carboys or bottles should never be exposed to sunlight or fluorescent light, and exposure to incandescent light should be limited. Beer should be bottled in brown bottles wherever possible to minimize skunking, but even brown bottles should not be left in sunlight for long periods of time. In clear or green glass, skunking can happen in a matter of minutes.

Some commercial breweries that bottle their beer in green or clear bottles avoid skunking by using special hop extracts which do not contain isohumulone, thus eliminating the problem of skunking altogether. This is not practical or desirable for most homebrewers.

Creating MBT

To create an MBT character in beer for tasting or judging testing or calibration, leave a bottle of Heineken or another lager bottled in a green bottle in bright sunlight for fifteen minutes.

I have also been concerned with this and after brewing MANY batches outside in the warm sunshine during the summer, I have concluded that this issue only happens AFTER the yeast is pitched.

FWIW I never leave a chilled pot of wort exposed to the elements longer than is necessary so I may not have exposed any wort long enough. I would be more concerned about wild yeast or some other contamination getting into the wort before being worried about the sunlight light striking it.
 
I suppose all will be well with this beer. I've brewed more than twenty batches in the daylight without issue.

My slightly skunked beer caused a moment of doubt.

The weeks of waiting for this batch will be painful. The wort tasted great. The blow of tube is bubbling this morning.
 
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