bn163
Member
Northern Brewer Extra Pale Ale, extract + specialty grains. Procedure-wise, everything went well, with the exception being that my OG was a little lower than expected (1.041 vs 1.045). Pitched Safale US-05 yeast. 8 days in primary & 20 days in secondary @ around 68F. Final gravity = 1.010. 5 ounces priming sugar at bottling. 3 weeks in bottles @ 68F. Sampled after spending 48 hours in refrigerator.
Beer was cloudy with good carbonation, but little-to-no head. Good bitterness, but kind of bland (lacks some maltiness?). Good copper color. While drinkable, it is not something I want to share with my friends.
The head issue could be due to bottle cleaning. Soaked bottles in oxyclean for wash & to remove labels. Think I rinsed thoroughly, but concerned that I could have left behind glue residue from wash water.
Not sure what to think about the flavor or body of the beer. Could my beer still be young/green? Should I expect it to improve with some time, or should I go ahead & drink it to get rid of it?
Should the cloudiness improve? Think i read somewhere that the US-05 yeast is low floculating? Should I give it more time to settle out?
Have a NB Phat Tyre (extract + specialty grain) in secondary that I am now also concerned about.
Thanks for input.
Beer was cloudy with good carbonation, but little-to-no head. Good bitterness, but kind of bland (lacks some maltiness?). Good copper color. While drinkable, it is not something I want to share with my friends.
The head issue could be due to bottle cleaning. Soaked bottles in oxyclean for wash & to remove labels. Think I rinsed thoroughly, but concerned that I could have left behind glue residue from wash water.
Not sure what to think about the flavor or body of the beer. Could my beer still be young/green? Should I expect it to improve with some time, or should I go ahead & drink it to get rid of it?
Should the cloudiness improve? Think i read somewhere that the US-05 yeast is low floculating? Should I give it more time to settle out?
Have a NB Phat Tyre (extract + specialty grain) in secondary that I am now also concerned about.
Thanks for input.