soupfist
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2011
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- 89
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I just brewed a Centennial Blonde ale that started at .038 and stopped bubbling three days later (yeast was Nottingham). I cracked the bucket open to take a sample. The beer was clearly on the tail end of primary activity, still cloudy, fizzy and a bit churned up. It measured .009, and when I tasted it, it tasted like I'd mixed a tablespoon of baking soda in with a flat Miller High Life. In fact, I'm still trying to get the taste out of my mouth...(a bit of my homebrew Brown Ale would do the trick, but I'm at work...
).
I'm just experienced enough to know not to expect anything pleasant-tasting to come out of a fermenter after only three days. So this is not a n00b "Is My Beer Ruined?" question. I'm just scientifically curious. What's causing that flavor? Is that what active yeast tastes like when it's doing its thing? It's a bit mystifying because the flavor is so unmistakeably HCO3 and yet my tap water is extremely soft, so I can't figure out how I could get such a strong flavor of it in so small a sample.

I'm just experienced enough to know not to expect anything pleasant-tasting to come out of a fermenter after only three days. So this is not a n00b "Is My Beer Ruined?" question. I'm just scientifically curious. What's causing that flavor? Is that what active yeast tastes like when it's doing its thing? It's a bit mystifying because the flavor is so unmistakeably HCO3 and yet my tap water is extremely soft, so I can't figure out how I could get such a strong flavor of it in so small a sample.