TheZymurgist
Well-Known Member
Any product (including dry ice) that is used with food must be food grade.
I think it's any product that's used in food must be food grade, but I'm curious what your source is.
Any product (including dry ice) that is used with food must be food grade.
I think it's any product that's used in food must be food grade, but I'm curious what your source is.
I tried this method on a dry hopped saison I brewed a couple months ago. The hop aroma was there, but behind the saison aroma. In the end, the saison came more hoppy than my IPAs.
I will brew an IPA this week and intend to use dry ice again. I experience all the problems you list with my hoppy beers. Must be O2.
As you said, WITH ice cream, not in ice cream. I've read other sources that state dry ice is fairly dirty. It's not made to be consumed.
1. I deal with dry ice all the time at work...I would not put it into my beer. (a halloween punch, maybe, but as a novelty)
When you say that other styles do not show the problem it says to me that oxidation is NOT your problem. At least not introduced during the bottling process.
Is it unhealthy?