jwbeard
Well-Known Member
So yes, I know what most of you are thinking from the title - cold crashing will clear the beer from the top down, nothing to worry about. Issue is a bit stranger than that though.
Brewed a hefeweizen with a friend about two weeks ago. Was done fermenting, and the sample for our final FG test was crystal clear. Very strange for a hefe, but what are you going to do other than call it a krystalweizen and drink it anyways. Still tasted good.
After throwing it in the refrigerator to cold crash for a brief period (since it was already clearer than we wanted), a one-inch band appeared at the top of the carboy of almost completely clear and colorless liquid:
It's the tannish band right below the dried krausen and above the (oddly clear) hefeweizen.
Anyone know what could cause this? It's not like the yeast and proteins just fell out of solution and made it clearer, since that wouldn't have changed the color (and wouldn't have created such a discrete band of colorless liquid).
Any thoughts?
Brewed a hefeweizen with a friend about two weeks ago. Was done fermenting, and the sample for our final FG test was crystal clear. Very strange for a hefe, but what are you going to do other than call it a krystalweizen and drink it anyways. Still tasted good.
After throwing it in the refrigerator to cold crash for a brief period (since it was already clearer than we wanted), a one-inch band appeared at the top of the carboy of almost completely clear and colorless liquid:

It's the tannish band right below the dried krausen and above the (oddly clear) hefeweizen.
Anyone know what could cause this? It's not like the yeast and proteins just fell out of solution and made it clearer, since that wouldn't have changed the color (and wouldn't have created such a discrete band of colorless liquid).
Any thoughts?