wildwest450
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Does this paragraph make anyone else laugh?
It's alternative brewing, man!
_
Does this paragraph make anyone else laugh?
Does this paragraph make anyone else laugh?
I think you're nitpicking just because I'm new here, and somehow you construe my intentions as being some kind of pioneer. Not the case, just thought it might be interesting to share my experiences.
Maybe, like me, you have even busted a brewing myth or two!
I have developed my own methods that make brewing more effortless and efficient.
I'm sure what I'm going to publish below will be pure beer heresy to most
If you're wondering why people "construe your intentions as being some kind of pioneer", consider the following:
Those statements certainly sound like someone claiming to be a pioneer. I only point this out because if you really want to understand why you are getting the responses you are getting, statements like the above are part of the reason.
It is already apparent to any new people reading this, but to add my two cents...
Alter is basically just a cavalier brewer. Not measuring stuff or taking into account the scientific aspects of brewing is not revolutionary. Most people who have been brewing for a long time have had one too many early int he brew day then said 'screw it' and not measured anything and cut all the corners. That has been happening since antiquity. To claim it as a progressive brewing style is a bit off.
BIAB works. So does no chill. They are both fine techniques. A 30 minute mash is fine too, if you are happy with the fermentation profile after 30 minutes, then that is great. Simplifying a brew day is a great thing, but your process isn't much simpler than a standard brew day and would only save about 45 minutes to an hour from my brew day.
The biggest difference between "conventional" brewer and the ideas described here are that you do not control your product. That is fine, but anyone new enough to be considering these ideas should know that is not the best way to get a quality product on a consistent basis.
Also, anecdotal evidence on the internet is worth about and much as my pile of wooden nickels. If long standing scientific evidence shows that oxidation is a major issue to the stability and quality of beer and has a significant contribution to a beers flavor, do you really think I should listen to you when you say "I have tasted no difference"? I myself do detect oxidation in my beers and other commercial beers that have been not been as badly mishandled as yours.
Not to go off and be a jerk, but touting your alternative brewing style is crazy talk. Many of the practices you discuss have been used to great effect for quite some time, but they should not be used cavalierly and be expected to produce consistent and quality results.
I haven't tried the one's you've mentioned, but I have tried a couple that had so much hop "flavor" and aroma that they were disgusting. I'm a fan of the SMASH concept.
Yes, any exposure to oxygen after the first 5-15ish hours of fermentation (this depends on factors such as the original gravity of the beer) in which the yeast are building cell walls and multiplying will react with the beer to form generally undesirable flavor compounds and "oxidize" the beer. During active fermentation the yeast does have some ability to absorb some oxygen, and to "scrub out" some level of oxygen via the motion of CO2 exiting the beer. However, after primary fermentation any exposure to oxygen will have a permanent effect on the oxidation level of the beer.
Pouring your beer will introduce a large amount of oxygen into the beer. Perhaps you enjoy the oxidized flavors this produces (a serious option) and think this enhances your beers. Or, like you stated, perhaps you are drinking all your beer fresh enough for oxidation to not fully affect the beer. That is fine and works great. However, stating that pouring your beer around all higgldy piggly will have no affect on oxidation levels is just factually inaccurate.
Any book with any level of in depth fermentation analysis will explain these concepts in more detail and more eloquently than I have here.
Do you do this because the bottling wand is too expensive ($1.50)? Even a bottling wand does not completely protect your beer for oxygen contact, but it is miles ahead of pouring your beer around post fermentation. I just don't understand this idea.
The micro fermentation that occurs in the bottle does not absorb or use all the oxygen present in the head space. Indeed, the micro fermentation and tiny amount of oxidation that inevitably occurs in bottle conditioning is a part of the effect of bottle conditioning. However, it should be controlled intentionally, not left to chance.
I will also state that brewing myths have only really existed among the ignorant (me included). For example, non of these so called "myths" were unknown to professional brewers (e.g., BMC). Science has explained all these things for loooooong time. HBT has "solved" as many myths as Alter has (zero).
Off the top of my head, Kai is the only one who stands out as running actual scientific experiments with any amount of good data and conclusions. We as a community have been creative in solving problems to make better brewing more available to more people, but creativity is a different animal than "busting myths".
Focus on brewing better beer and learning more about how to control the process. Or don't and just brew beer that you like. Read some books, or don't. Claiming to bust myths is the internet equivalent to measuring your penis then bragging about it.
When the mash time is over, I don't bother checking pH, conversion, or any other technical voodoo.
Wow this thread turned into something I was NOT expecting ... funny how that works out.
This is the statement that sort of bothered me. "Voodoo" implies mysticism, magic, ghosts, goblins, and make-believe...
The technical aspects of brewing are much more tangible than that.
I do think it's possible to make beer without sweating the technical details but I don't think anyone will make truly great beer without getting a bit technical about their brewing processes. This includes basic things like mash pH, water chemistry, gravity readings, mash temps, etc.
AlterBrewer said:Just because I busted a myth or two in my opinion, doesn't mean that I am saying I was the first to do it.
I mentioned in the OP that I had learned about BIAB and NC from the forums.
Okay you have to be trolling because nobody is this dense.
So you're saying you learned techniques on the forum on which you're trying to say you busted the myths of said techniques (but you didn't do it first.)
If that statement doesn't make sense then you now know how we feel when we read your posts.
So many impassioned replies. I guess some feelings got hurt or toes were stepped on.
The point of the forum is to share and discuss homebrew techniques, right? No need to belittle people for doing so. As a new user it's not an encouraging sign.