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Extended the shelf life of IPA

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Hi All

I have the question about hot to extended the shelf life of IPA, and prevent oxidation. For the current process, what I did is as follows.
However, it didn't go well which the taste did have big degrade after only 1 months into the keg.

1. Added the hop during the mesh to decrease the iron ions as per the Scott Janish concept
2 Added the ascobic acid 4g during the mash
3. Keg close transfer (Before doing this, fill the star san in the keg, and pump the star san out to make sure no oxygen in the keg)

I am thinking about to add brewtan B ? However, I did do some research that it might not good for the IPA.
Any suggestion or process which I can do.

Thanks
 
One month in the keg for an IPA is a long time. Hop character is going to fade over time no matter what you do.
Strongly disagree.

3+ weeks of cold conditioning in keg is basically mandatory for extremely heavily dry hopped IPAs. I've stored IPAs in keg at room temperature for up to 12 weeks with no significant degradation in aroma or flavour.

If you're experiencing significant degradation of your IPAs after four weeks, then it's likely down to some element of process.



Areas I would be considering:

Dry hopping: how are you dry hopping to minimise exposure?

Getting beer of trub/hop matter: are you dropping yeast, transferring to secondary, or just letting beer sit on the hops and for how long?

Closed transfer: is your keg absolutely full to the brim of starsan, or did you leave head space? Did you purge your transfer lines too?
 
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3. Keg close transfer (Before doing this, fill the star san in the keg, and pump the star san out to make sure no oxygen in the keg)
With a closed transfer system, instead of Star San, I recommend using Five Star's low foam product Saniclean. Star San will leave some foam behind in the keg and I did hear a podcast (forget which, but probably Brulosophy) one time where they were questioning if the air in the foam bubbles could lead to oxidizing a beer and the recommendation was to use Saniclean instead.
 
With a closed transfer system, instead of Star San, I recommend using Five Star's low foam product Saniclean. Star San will leave some foam behind in the keg and I did hear a podcast (forget which, but probably Brulosophy) one time where they were questioning if the air in the foam bubbles could lead to oxidizing a beer and the recommendation was to use Saniclean instead.
One workaround to this is adding your starsan once the keg has been filled to basically the brim and then gently shaking to mix, which seems to largely suppress foam creation.
 
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