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Excess bittering

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Tom 7

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Oct 16, 2019
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Hi,

I'm in late ferment with a sort-of Jai Alai IPA clone, and have one issue... My mash efficiency wasn't quite what I was after, and I didn't want to get the caramel flavors that come with a heavy boil-down, so it came out at about 6.5 ABV instead of the targeted 7.4. The overall flavor is really good - the base malt and hop flavors and aroma are right on target. However, my 60-minute addition was based on the heavier target ABV. So, it's got enough bitterness to go a bit out of balance.

I'm sure that if I age it longer, this will abate, but by then the good part of its hop flavor will be fading.

Any thoughts or tips? Thanks!!
 
Depending on how much time and effort you want to put into this beer you could try a technique called backsweetening. This is more commonly used in making wine or mead but can be done with beer.

Another option might be to just drink it mixed 50-50 with Busch Light or some other, relatively flavorless, beer. Good luck.
 
Hi,

The overall flavor is really good - the base malt and hop flavors and aroma are right on target.

Any thoughts or tips? Thanks!!

I would let it age but drink some on a regular basis to monitor the effects of time on the bitterness and hop flavor. Learn something. I would not try to "repair it".

Next, I would brew it again and figure out where your efficiency fell off ( or just add another pound of base malt).
 
Depending on how much time and effort you want to put into this beer you could try a technique called backsweetening. This is more commonly used in making wine or mead but can be done with beer.

Another option might be to just drink it mixed 50-50 with Busch Light or some other, relatively flavorless, beer. Good luck.

Thanks for the ideas! I think this might be too subtle a beer for backsweetening, but that article you pointed to is a really good read.
 
I would let it age but drink some on a regular basis to monitor the effects of time on the bitterness and hop flavor. Learn something. I would not try to "repair it".

Next, I would brew it again and figure out where your efficiency fell off ( or just add another pound of base malt).

Thanks! It seems like it'll be a decent beer when it's done, so the idea of tasting and keeping notes as it ages is solid. Pretty sure that the inefficiency was because I messed up a PH measurement at the start of the mash and let it stay too high, probably 5.8 or 5.9. What a fun learning curve this is.
 

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