So I just tapped the Strata SMaSH that I brewed two weeks ago. 14lbs two row, and lots of delicious Strata hops as late additions. Will put it out there that I use Great Western two row as my base malt for most of my beers, including lagers. It usually throws a nice slightly reddish-gold color, fairly consistent. I have a cold-fermented lager on tap right now as well, that was brewed with that same malt, although different hops (Chinook and Crystal, it's my house lager and turns out great every time), and of course fermented on lager yeast where the Strata was done on Nottingham. On pouring the Strata, I was amazed to note that color-wise it looks almost as light as a pilsner; not clear yet but will be in a day or two. The lager (currently 5 weeks old) is a darker gold, and had two pounds less in the grain bill than the Strata. It hasn't changed much in color since it was first tapped, so I don't think it's oxidation (although yes I know that happens with all beers no matter what we do). The Strata did get an extended cold crash (life got in the way, also laziness) of over a week with the dry hops in it. Any ideas (however far out there) from you guys as to how this could have happened? Both beers taste great, no off flavors and carbonated perfectly. I'm stumped.