SlanginDueces
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2013
- Messages
- 190
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I recently started entering competitions to get some honest feedback on my beers. The first few I did not get score sheets back (just the scores). I finally was able to get the score sheets for one of them, the Cincinnati All-American Home Brew Competition. I entered 4 beers in different categories and was very impressed with the feedback most of the judges provided. It was awesome to actually get someone that knows what they are doing tell you what your beer really taste like instead of friends/family saying they love everything. All scored above 30 and I even took 2nd in the Stout category with a 38 RIS but a common trend among all the beers was "a slight astringent" character. I guess I would not be a good critic because I don't get that at all. It is present in all the categories I entered so I figure there must be something in my process that I can tweak.
I have a 20gal Electric setup and a very well controlled fermentation chamber. My first thought would be maybe something in the mash would be causing excessive tannin extraction. My setup gets really high efficiency at a consistent 85% which I never thought was an issue but maybe that has something to do with it? I usually mash for 60 min and fly sparge for 60-90 min.
I always use liquid yeast with a starter but I do not oxygenate...not sure if stressed yeast could cause astringency.
Anyone else ever run into this?
I have a 20gal Electric setup and a very well controlled fermentation chamber. My first thought would be maybe something in the mash would be causing excessive tannin extraction. My setup gets really high efficiency at a consistent 85% which I never thought was an issue but maybe that has something to do with it? I usually mash for 60 min and fly sparge for 60-90 min.
I always use liquid yeast with a starter but I do not oxygenate...not sure if stressed yeast could cause astringency.
Anyone else ever run into this?