Cornell?
Nope, just the area.
Cornell?
I made this some time back and tried it for the first time last weekend. Mine came out tasting like a mixture of Miller Lite and Heineken. Slight skunky taste.
I've made several 5 gal. batches of this recipe and all turned out really well except for the last one. Previous batches were so well received that I found myself brewing a batch every 3-4 weeks in order to avoid running out. The slight "skunkiness" you are describing is close to what I got out of this last batch. Since all previous batches were great I know it can't be the recipe. My thinking is that the water I'm using now may have changed slightly in either chemistry or taste since my earlier brews.
I just bought a couple ounces of whole leaf Cascade hops and will try to dry-hop in the keg to see if I can save this batch. For the next batch I'll use straight RO water with some minor additions or buy spring water.
Houston we have a problem I managed to brew 11 gallons of water and I'm not exaggerating it looks like water and tastes like water. Not sure where I went wrong I mean I did a partial boil and topped off with a lot of water but I've done this before without a problem and my fermentation was very vigorous.
I'm going to post my whole process in the beginners forum and see if someone can tell where it all went bad, it's not good because the party is Friday so obviously we're not drinking co3c
It's not bad enough for me to add hops. It's just a slight taste. Most people have liked the beer. It's not a bad thing to compare it to Heineken. The flavor is crisp and clean, no after or lingering flavors. Just that slight skunk taste. One of my friends said it tasted like a version Stella but with a not as strong flavor profile. I'll take, especially since this was my first AG batch.
Did it look like water when you put it in the fermenter?
No but it did seem lighter than usual
Why because it floated higher?
If it turned out close and its your first AG I'd say it was a success!Try it again when you have room in the keg or bottles available.
I like to make this beer because everyone likes it (even a few beer snob buddies), it finishes fast and is very refreshing as a summer beer. I think it is a bit sensitive to initial fermentation temps. Get it down to around 65-68F before pitching the yeast and then hold it there. It should turn out great.
Cheers!
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I just bought enough flaked rice and maze to do 50 gallons of this recipe
all the best
S_M
You go bny. I like this one too and will likely keep it on tap for myself and friends since I'm in the process of a 6 tap keezer.
What am I saying. I've pretty much kept it on tap with my two tap kegorator, one tap fridge, and one picnic tap fermentor when nothing is fermenting.
I just bought enough flaked rice and maze to do 50 gallons of this recipe
all the best
S_M