maltmeister
Member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2013
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 2
I'll try to keep this post short and not terribly broad... I've been homebrewing for 2 or 3 years now, probably done 10-12 extract brews (kits mostly, and one partial mash kit). I've tried all kinds of styles from wheats to brown ales to porters. Through this whole journey something has been bugging me, though. It's this aroma/taste/aftertaste in all of my beers. Through many changes to perfect technique, it's always there to varying degrees. Difficult to characterize. I've read the chapters and posts on off flavors, haven't found one that exactly describes it. Almost like the chlorine-taste that has been described elsewhere; this kind of sharp, plastic-y flavor that you can even smell before taking a sip. More chemical-like than medicinal. It bugs me enough that no matter what I make, I ALWAYS prefer the taste of professionally-brewed beer (other than Bud, Coors, urine, et. al).
In terms of my technique, I've studied the forums and followed the general dictums. My temperatures are accurate, sanitation excellent (FYI, use Star-San), times according to recipe. I tried increasing my boil volumes, changing water type, added a wort chiller to the routine, switched from bucket to glass carboy. The ingredients are fresh (usually NB), tried pitching more yeast (double packs or making a starter), pitching temps around 70-75. Built a keezer that doubles as a fermentation chamber to make sure ferm temps are where they're supposed to be. Plenty of fermentation time (2-3wks in primary and 2-4 weeks in secondary).
I still can't get rid of the taste. It's a little less noticeable with stouts/porters and worse with IPAs, brown ales. I dilute to make sure I hit my OGs according to recipe, sometimes my FG is higher than target but when it bottle conditions or kegs (I usually split the batch to compare), it ends up actually LESS sweet than I'd like. I also NEVER get any malt sweetness. If there is any sweet flavor, it's a kind of thin, sugary sweet and not malty.
So I guess my question (finally!) is: what am I doing wrong? Is this just some kind of flavor that I'm particularly attuned to (that isn't in professionally-made beers)? The wife says she doesn't really notice it but I also don't see her going for the homebrew as often as the other beers we keep around. I don't live in an area with an active homebrew scene so I can't really taste other peoples brew to see if it's similar. I'm getting a little disheartened because each time I try to tighten my process and add techniques that are supposed to "improve" or "clean" the flavors but it's always the same.
Any thoughts, feedback would be MUCH appreciated.
In terms of my technique, I've studied the forums and followed the general dictums. My temperatures are accurate, sanitation excellent (FYI, use Star-San), times according to recipe. I tried increasing my boil volumes, changing water type, added a wort chiller to the routine, switched from bucket to glass carboy. The ingredients are fresh (usually NB), tried pitching more yeast (double packs or making a starter), pitching temps around 70-75. Built a keezer that doubles as a fermentation chamber to make sure ferm temps are where they're supposed to be. Plenty of fermentation time (2-3wks in primary and 2-4 weeks in secondary).
I still can't get rid of the taste. It's a little less noticeable with stouts/porters and worse with IPAs, brown ales. I dilute to make sure I hit my OGs according to recipe, sometimes my FG is higher than target but when it bottle conditions or kegs (I usually split the batch to compare), it ends up actually LESS sweet than I'd like. I also NEVER get any malt sweetness. If there is any sweet flavor, it's a kind of thin, sugary sweet and not malty.
So I guess my question (finally!) is: what am I doing wrong? Is this just some kind of flavor that I'm particularly attuned to (that isn't in professionally-made beers)? The wife says she doesn't really notice it but I also don't see her going for the homebrew as often as the other beers we keep around. I don't live in an area with an active homebrew scene so I can't really taste other peoples brew to see if it's similar. I'm getting a little disheartened because each time I try to tighten my process and add techniques that are supposed to "improve" or "clean" the flavors but it's always the same.
Any thoughts, feedback would be MUCH appreciated.