anbowden
Well-Known Member
I know the purpose of bottle conditioning is two fold: 1) To carbonate the beer, and 2) To allow the flavors to develop and mature.
If a beer has been bulk aged in a secondary fermenter for months, how much more flavor development happens during bottle conditioning?
As you might suspect, I'm asking because I'm impatiently waiting to drink my first bulk-aged beer(an extract Weizenbock), and it's almost carbed at 1.5 weeks in the bottled(feeling a plastic bottle).
Note: I have ready Revvy's blog on bottling and patience.
Note 2: I did search on the forum and couldn't find an answer to this exact question.
Thanks,
Andy
If a beer has been bulk aged in a secondary fermenter for months, how much more flavor development happens during bottle conditioning?
As you might suspect, I'm asking because I'm impatiently waiting to drink my first bulk-aged beer(an extract Weizenbock), and it's almost carbed at 1.5 weeks in the bottled(feeling a plastic bottle).
Note: I have ready Revvy's blog on bottling and patience.
Note 2: I did search on the forum and couldn't find an answer to this exact question.
Thanks,
Andy