It obviously would have been better still had you simply said "Please post a picture of your beer" to which I probably would have responded "What has that got to do with what I am talking about?" But as you want to see a picture of my beer here it is:
Now how does this contribute to the discussion? What does it illustrate other than that it is possible for a home brewer to make an appealing looking beer? Yes presentation is important (as Charlie Bamforth says "We drink with out eyes") but there's lots more to a beer than how it looks. This was brewed with very soft (RO + a bit of CaCl2, ~0 sulfate, ~0 alkalinity) water using a triple decoction mash, the Budvar pilsner strain, and fermented in the traditional way (no diacetyl rest, no crash, long lagering).
That looks a very good beer regardless of being in an ale glass and by a traditional lager manufacturing process. That yeast strain might even be one isolated by Hanson in Copenhagen in the laboratory of Jacobsen's brewery named after son Carl. The ingredients might not have been exactly those from earlier times, but feel sure they would be selected fr the process used. I'm sure you have much advice to offer to other brewers producing that style.
I’ve toyed with high mineralization in my beers and ultimately came to the conclusion that it doesn’t benefit beer flavor.
But then I feel there could be some merit to mineralization when the alternative is an unacceptable pH. Maybe this is the best alternative in that case?
I do suggest that our British cohorts consider exploring modest mineralization along with proper pH control to see if the lack of crunchiness is worth the improved perceptions of malt and hops. I found that it is.
Yes, I hear that and you are not alone in expressing that opinion, but from my own experience I'd really like to know why?
Lagering is a common process for clarifying beer, but has been very largely obsolete in British Ale brewing for several generations. Before Pasteur beer was brewed mostly in cold periods and therefore stored for long periods, kept sound by its alcohol content, to supply demands over the whole year. After Pasteur's work breweries were kept clean and brewing was possible through all seasons, aided by the introduction of refrigeration. British malts towards the end of the nineteen the century did have less nitrogen content than most other European and, I am informed, all North American barleys. There were however barleys grown in some parts of Europe, Asia and North Africa that had very low nitrogen content and were also capable of producing high level of extract. The story in the history of Arthur Soames Maltings at Grimsby, but briefly, their produce made beers that dropped cleared in fewer days that with other malts might take months. So I wonder if we talk at cross purposes with your beers made from different ingredients to have the experience you express?
British brewers have at times included so called Califonian barley malt (6 row) for its superior content of enzymes allowing flaked maize in the mash to reduce protein content as well as many other ways to keep British ales clear, including of course, sufficient calcium in the brewing liquor. Now British barleys have been bred and kilned for lower nitrogen and extra enzymes as well as high extract potential. Even so with low levels of calcium the beers they make take longer to clear and don't taste as good.
Almost in parallel with my beer shown earlier, which was clear enough and tasting good with a week of being casked, I brewed another with the same water profile except with other malts of lower grade. Even though no high nitrogen adjucts were added as in the one shown, flaked maize and invert sugar from Ragus, after a month it still has a haze and I'm not sure how longer it will need. My latest brew was with Maris Otter, flaked maize and invert with a calcium level of 134ppm. At the moment the jury is still out with this one, it's on the cusp but proves the importance of calcium in ales for clarity, taste might be different, but I'd need to drink other peoples beer knowing how they were made before I might change my view.
It couldn't be that American brewing is out on the limb, could it?
https://carlsberggroup.com/products/jacobsen/jacobsen-original-dark-lager/