Really cool. Been following this thread since the beginning. How does it taste?Wife convinced me to go big or go home.
Used my entire supply of unaged whiskey to make the buffering solution. Used a dilution between the 400 and 200.
Final product is in fact blue from every angle and light.
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Do we really want to know?Really cool. Been following this thread since the beginning. How does it taste?
mood ring beer???As a Kentucky Wildcats fan this blue beer thing intrigues me.
A little tidbit from my friend the internet(eater.com); "Butterfly pea tea has an incredibly sensitive pH balance, meaning even the slightest shift in acidity can turn a beverage from deep blue, to a vibrant plum, to a fizzy magenta. The drink becomes a sippable chameleon: The more acid that comes in contact with the tea, the lighter in color it becomes. From pH 8 to pH 4, the tea is a regal shade of blue. It quickly shifts into deep purple terrain at pH 3, and finally bursts into carnation pink territory at pH 2."
What do you guys think about brewing with alkaline water to counteract the possibility of acidity changing the blue color from the pea flower? I also just made a second attempt at this endeavor and so far so good but I was worried about the acidity.
I tried adding sodium bicarbonate to a small sample of this... after dumping a lot more sodium bicarbonate than there was liquid originally, I still only got green. Obviously, it tasted gross. Still, my wife likes the color of my Clitori'ale, so even if it's not blue, it's not an utter failure.![]()
Actually if you’re green, you went too far with too much sodium bicarbonate.
Even in mine I think I went to far because it seems to have obliterated any malt and hop flavors.
Well, yea, but before going to green, it never passed by blue. The must was not very light-colored, so any blue from the clitoria gets mixed with the red from the malt. I'd have to try again with an american light lager malt bill to hope getting something closer to blue. pH was certainly a factor, but not the only one.
Ah, good old Clitoria. You want to be careful with that, as I suspect it acts like litmus and will go pink in something as acid as beer. Certainly I assume that's what's happening with Sharish "magic gin", which is blue-ish but turns pink when you add tonic and lemon, and contains Clitoria.