• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

1st Brew is Sweet....What Happened?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Neomich

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2007
Messages
460
Reaction score
1
Location
Fort Worth (soon)
I just opened up my first bottle of my first batch and it's pretty sweet.

I had a really hard time getting my water to boil and I think my temperature might have been too low. Would this cause the hops to not do its job very well? I made a belgian wit recipe from AHS. Pretty straight forward recipe and instructions but I think its due to the water temperature.

Could this be the cause? I'd like to fix it before this coming weekend when I do my next batch.

Luckily, I won't mind a sweeter brew. SWMBO would like it and my other friends I'm sure would help finish it off.
 
Sounds like it didnt ferment long enough. Did you take a hydrometer reading? Too much sugar left in brew usually means the yeast didnt finish the job.
Boil...should be a long boil, most recipes, like 30-60 minutes at a nice roiling boil. If you didnt boil, thats part of the problem too.
 
The Belgian Wit is a low bitterness, sweet style. Sounds like you made it correctly.

[A good boil is important for bittering. A simmer can be 5-10 degrees below a boil and hop utilization drops rapidly.]
 
lack of a decent boil lowers hop utilization
boiling only a couple gallons (partial boil) instead of a full 5+gallon boil lowers hop utilization too

what is the gravity? need to make sure its really done. a Wit isn't real bitter, but it shouldn't be too sweet either.
 
A low bitter Wit and a low boil efficiency means your wit is sweeter than designed.

Give us some more details on your process and hydrometer readings you've taken.
 
I've been at bit busy here at work and just now had a chance to respond.

My OG reading wat 1.057. The FG reading was sitting right at 1.012 - 1.013. It sat there for a few days and I believe the fermentation was completed. It sat in primary for 3 weeks around 73 degrees.

I think I might have jumped the gun a bit on claiming it is 'Too' sweet. I have been drinking some hoppy rye ales lately and the taste caught me off guard. Just to be sure, I got me a Blue Moon at dinner last night after trying mine and sure enough, it tastes real close. Maybe my flavors are a bit stronger but I think adding a slice of lemon in the glass will offset some of the sweetness and letting it sit a little longer might help. The beer had only been in the bottle 5 days.

I did have issues keeping a good boil going, my flat top electric stove just doesn't keep up that well. I attempted to boil the wort for the full 60 minutes. I'll use less water this time and see if it helps.

Overall, I think this beer is fine. I just forgot what a Belgian Wit really tastes like and my palate was expecting something much different.

Thanks everyone for the input. I think I'll start keeping at least one commercial brew that resembles my current batch to use as a control.
 
I can vouch that fermentation looks complete with that starting and ending gravity.

I agree, I think you just weren't expecting such a different brew flavor. Kinda like the first time a BMC drinker tries a real beer, especially a stout or porter.

Like my dad...he ******* how 'heavy' wheat beers are...cuz he's a die hard Bud Light guy.
 
I'm a big fan of wheat and wit beers, I just forgot how unique the flavor was. That's the whole reason I chose to brew one! I've been 'sampling' a few this evening and it's really tasting well. I put a couple six packs in the fridge so me and my buddy can 'sample' more while I show him how easy it is to make great beer at home this weekend.

Yeah, I like beer.
 
Back
Top