i tasted a bottle every other week for 6 months or longer. then dumped. i wanted to cry
The taste in my batch is bitter but I can still drink it. What I really want is the taste from before I bottled this batch.
i tasted a bottle every other week for 6 months or longer. then dumped. i wanted to cry
i thought you could not pitch to much yeast. within a reasonable amount. 2 packs sound resonable. and it tasted good when fermentation was complete.
I'm wondering if maybe your warm ferment temps and using two pack of Notty is bringing out something funky. One pack of Notty is more than enough in a 5g batch. That stuff is pretty aggresive, so I bet it went crazy with all of that extra yeast and high temps. Just a thought, it may not mean anything.
It's been in bottles a few months now.
Seems to have mellowed out a lot.
There is still some bitterness. I think most of the bitterness was from my mini mash method. I was squeezing the grain bag. I have the same taste in the next batch I brewed but not to the same extent. That batch didn't have roasted barley it just had chocolate malt. It is also quite a bit more hoppy. For the follow up batch a made a cardboard conditioning chamber I put the whole batch in and put cookie sheets on the top of the cases. I put frozen two liter bottles on top of the sheets. This has help the conditioning process I think because after 3 weeks the follow up batch seems to be tasting quite good.
flush the bag with hot water, but squeezing the bag can cause unpleasant off flavors. i learned this lesson the 'hard way'. i thought i was getting the most bang for my buck out of my grains, but i was releasing compounds that should not end up in my brew. flush don't squeeze.
Tannins And Astringency
If you are worried about squeezing your bag too much or crushing too fine, relax! Astringent beers do not come from finely crushed or squeezed husks but come rather from a combination of high temperatures and high pH. These conditions pull the polyhenols out of the husk. The higher your pH and the higher temperature you expose your grain to, the worse the problem becomes. Any brewer, traditional or BIAB, should never let these conditions arrive. If you do allow these conditions to arrive, then you will find yourself in exactly the same position as a traditional brewer. Many commercial breweries actually hammer mill their grain to powder for use in mash filter systems because they have control of their pH and temperatures. This control (and obviously expensive complex equipment) allows them non-astringent beers and into kettle, efficiencies of over 100%.
The two most influential factors affecting the extraction of tannins from malt into wort are pH and temperature. All-grain brewers are very careful not to allow wort pH to reach more than about pH 6 during sparging because tannin extraction increases with pH. In all-grain brewing wort pH typically rises during the last stages of wort collection and is one of the factors letting the brewer know that wort collection should be stopped.....
Temperature also affects tannin extraction. This relationship is pretty simple. If you dont want to run the risk of getting too much tannin in your wort, keep the temperature just below 170° F.
This is where the answer to your last question begins. You ask whether steeping and sparging released "unwanted tannins" in your beer. For starters, all beer contains tannins. Some tannins are implicated in haze and some lend astringent flavors to beer.
The type most homebrewers are concerned about are those affecting flavor. In any case, it is up to the brewer to decide if the level of tannins in their beer is too high. The (in)famous decoction mash is frequently recommended when a brewer is in search of more malt flavor. Decoction mashes boil malt and among analytical brewers who are not afraid of rocking the boat with unpopular ideas are known to increase the astringent character associated with tannins. In general I wouldnt consider 170° F dangerously high with respect to tannin extraction. However, if you believe your beers may suffer because of too much astringency, consider adjusting your steep pH and lowering the temperature a few degrees.
More than likely your off flavors came from elsewhere.
There's no reason not to squeeze.....that's another old brewer's myth that has been misunderstood...and has been shot down..But if often just get's repeated as ROTE without anyone stopping to look beyond the just repeating the warning...
Read this https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f36/do-you-squeeze-bag-biab-177051/?highlight=squeeze
And this.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f39/squeezing-grain-bag-bad-175179/?highlight=squeeze
revvy,
now if you don't mind, could you so kindly clarify as to how hard i can squeeze my sack?![]()