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Taste testing before secondary

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by siucubfan8, Jun 13, 2013.

 

  1. #1
    siucubfan8

    Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    I was hesitant to ask this question but what the hell.
    When I racked to my secondary I obviously pulled a sample for a gravity check. I had a sanitized glass measuring cup. After testing the gravity I said "what the hell I'll taste it". It tasted hoppy but with it being warm and not carbonated I am not sure me tasting it told me anything. It wasn't bad/skunky but didn't taste like a whole lot. What should it taste like?
     
  2. #2
    Osedax

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    Young. After a few, you will understand that taste. The flavors shouldn't meld correctly yet. Don't worry, they will. The co2 will bring other flavors out as well.
     
  3. #3
    TyTanium

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    It should taste like warm, flat beer. I.e., it should give you a decent impression of the final product. Cold & carbed definitely changes it, especially the mouthfeel & tartness, but the underlying beer should taste good. Unless there's still a ton of yeast in suspension, different strains test better than others and may be in different stages of the conditioning process. But if you're at your final gravity and the yeast has dropped, it's usually a good indicator of the final beer.
     
  4. #4
    siucubfan8

    Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    I'm bottling tonight so I will take another taste.
    thanks
     
  5. #5
    Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    It will just taste like warm flat (but good!) beer. It will taste a bit different when fully carbed up but the basic beer will be the same. You'll get to a point where you can taste a beer out of the fermenter and say "Oh, this is gonna be gooooooood!".
     
  6. #6
    siucubfan8

    Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    So would you say it is pretty common for a 1st timer to not have the experience to really judge the warm/not carbonated beer after primary?
     
  7. #7
    Osedax

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    Kind of. Its something you will pick up along the way. Its just hard right now because you have no comparision to another batch. Experience = knowledge type of thing.
     
  8. #8
    kh54s10

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    I have experienced some beers that didn't taste real good at bottling and one that wasn't all that great at 2 weeks in bottles. All of those were very good at 3 weeks +.
     
  9. #9
    Heavywalker

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    pour a little of one of you commercial craft beers into a glass and let it sit out, warm up and go flat, then taste it. It doesn't taste as good but if you try you can taste the flavors and see how carbonation helps them come out. Keep this in mind when tasting your warm flat beer from secondary. Also keep in mind that the commercial beer that you tried has been properly aged while your brew is still green.
     
  10. #10
    Wynne-R

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    I like to pour the hydrometer sample into a cool glass and taste it a few times. Then I add a carbonated beer to it a little bit at a time, noting the change.

    Does siucubsfan8 mean what I think it does? I’m surprised there are eight of you.
     
  11. #11
    Gary22

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 13, 2013
    So I'm in a pretty similar stage in my brewing "career" lol. Not knowing what it should taste like upon sampling n what not. From my very limited experience if it tastes like flat beer it's going to be okay. What I did was I brewed an American ale from a mr. Beer (1st batch). When I sampled it it tasted like a flat Budweiser. When it was finally done bottling (n chilling) it tasted exactly like a Budweiser. N from my experience (which is minimal so take it for what is) that's Wat it was supposed to taste like. For my second batch I tasted a homebrew that someone brewed-so I brewed it. I just took a sampling yesterday before bottling n it tasted just like the homebrew sampling. So in another 2-3 weeks I'm pretty confident ill be enjoying some great homebrew. Best of luck to you. KEEP BREWING
     
  12. #12
    siucubfan8

    Member

    Posted Jun 14, 2013
    So I tasted before bottling and it tasted pretty darn good for a warm not carbonated beer. It was different than after primary. I also took a Coors and let it warm and lose carbonation to have a comparison. Thanks for the advice, now we wait 3 weeks.
     
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