I have searched and read lots of threads about certain off tastes in beers but I can't seem to figure out if I have heavy alcohols or extract twang, DMS, or something else.
What would lead me to believe its not heavy alcohols is that the taste will subside almost entirely if I let the beer sit for 10-15 minutes before I drink it. The same for the extract twang, the off taste in the aftertaste is just about completely gone if the beer sits and gets nearer to room temp. What also helps is getting it to fizz a little by swishing it around and letting a head form and subside again after the initial head from the pour has subsided. Reminds me of the way Saison Dupont tastes "hollow" until the head has completely subsided, same concept... not the same taste though.
Its extremely disheartening to have every beer come out this way where you just simply have to let it sit and swish it around for that weird off taste to go away. So I would really like to know if anyone can point me in the right direction to correct this.
Background so far on the beers:
All are extract.
I use 1/2 tap water and 1/2 bottled water. (Not RO/DI or RO or DI for the tap water, bottled... ??? not sure) The tap water is 7.2pH, low levels of Nitrates and Nitrites (less than 20ppm), a little bit toward bordering on the hard side of kh and gh, lower end of the spectrum on both. Not sure if the local municipality uses chlorine or chloramines.
English Pale Ale: has been bottled for almost 8 weeks at room temp, chilled 30 minutes and then served. Off aftertaste until above remedy.
Cream Ale: bottled 7 weeks, chilled 30 minutes then served. Off aftertaste, same remedy.
Vanilla Porter: Bottled 2 1/2 weeks, chilled 30 minutes. Same...
Do I need to cold condition for a few weeks in the fridge before I crack these open?? Now, don't get me wrong, this all tastes like beer, not Great beer but beer and its very drinkable, and most people don't even notice this taste but I do, or at least no one says anything about it....
??
What would lead me to believe its not heavy alcohols is that the taste will subside almost entirely if I let the beer sit for 10-15 minutes before I drink it. The same for the extract twang, the off taste in the aftertaste is just about completely gone if the beer sits and gets nearer to room temp. What also helps is getting it to fizz a little by swishing it around and letting a head form and subside again after the initial head from the pour has subsided. Reminds me of the way Saison Dupont tastes "hollow" until the head has completely subsided, same concept... not the same taste though.
Its extremely disheartening to have every beer come out this way where you just simply have to let it sit and swish it around for that weird off taste to go away. So I would really like to know if anyone can point me in the right direction to correct this.
Background so far on the beers:
All are extract.
I use 1/2 tap water and 1/2 bottled water. (Not RO/DI or RO or DI for the tap water, bottled... ??? not sure) The tap water is 7.2pH, low levels of Nitrates and Nitrites (less than 20ppm), a little bit toward bordering on the hard side of kh and gh, lower end of the spectrum on both. Not sure if the local municipality uses chlorine or chloramines.
English Pale Ale: has been bottled for almost 8 weeks at room temp, chilled 30 minutes and then served. Off aftertaste until above remedy.
Cream Ale: bottled 7 weeks, chilled 30 minutes then served. Off aftertaste, same remedy.
Vanilla Porter: Bottled 2 1/2 weeks, chilled 30 minutes. Same...
Do I need to cold condition for a few weeks in the fridge before I crack these open?? Now, don't get me wrong, this all tastes like beer, not Great beer but beer and its very drinkable, and most people don't even notice this taste but I do, or at least no one says anything about it....
??