• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

does flavor dilute over time in fermenter?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

kgrave61

Active Member
Joined
Mar 10, 2011
Messages
33
Reaction score
1
Location
Adrian
So I started experimenting with flavors recently and decided to use some hazelnut syrup in one of my beers. It was a monin syrup which places like coffee shops use to flavor drinks...I used to work at one so I went to the shop and they gave me a bottle for free. Due to the high sugar content I racked the beer on the syrup in the primary and let it sit. After about a week I tasted it and the hazelnut was grossly overwhelming. It then sat in a secondary for about 3 weeks and we tasted it again and it was fantastic...great nutty aroma with a hazelnut after taste....not sure if we just lucked out but my question is pertaining to all flavors that have sugars in them i.e. real fruits or syrups, will fermentation eventually dilute the flavors so they are not so pronounced over time? just wondering so if we try this again we can use the same measurements or lessen them
 
It's not dilluting, but flavors and even aromas break down over time, in fermenters and in the bottles. That's why an IPA will be more like a pale ale in a year, or that over oaked beer will mellow in a few months of bottle conditioning, or if you over spice.
 
It's not dilluting, but flavors and even aromas break down over time, in fermenters and in the bottles. That's why an IPA will be more like a pale ale in a year, or that over oaked beer will mellow in a few months of bottle conditioning, or if you over spice.

That's what I was figuring but better to have someone more experienced confirm my suspicions then just keep wondering. Thanks!
 
My latest "version" if you will,smells buiscuty,herby,flora,spicy sweet malt kind of thing. Not sugary,but balanced nicely with the traditional hops I used. Some of this on the back of all that must be indeed lovely! Congrats!
 
Back
Top