Stocktonbrew
Well-Known Member
I say try one so you can see how much it changes over the weeks ahead. I tried mine that was only a week old last night....dumped it. It did help take the edge off of waiting though.
I say try one so you can see how much it changes over the weeks ahead. I tried mine that was only a week old last night....dumped it. It did help take the edge off of waiting though.
I think that a lot of you folks must be the kind who peek at Christmas presents or even try to open the paper and rewrap them. I'd be pretty disappointed if I opened a bottle and it was so green that I felt the need to dump it. For me, it's so much better to wait and enjoy good beer.
Again, I said "for me". All you early testers should keep testing bottles - even pouring them out, if it makes you happy. Yay for the personal aspects of this hobby, you can do whatever you want.
But here's the thing- I've NEVER poured out a "green beer". Never.
A well made beer doesn't need that long to condition. I can drink it as soon as it's carbed up, if made properly. I have one recipe I make all the time (oatmeal stout) that needs about two weeks after fermention is over to meld and condition a bit, for the flavors to blend. Otherwise, they are fine at bottling or kegging.
A long conditioning time might cover up some brewing mistakes, but I'd rather just fix the brewing mistakes and forgo the lengthy conditioning. I've made over 300 batches of beer, so I'm speaking from experience on this.
I am well aware that you have brewed a TON of batches, have your process dialed in, and don't really need any aging. I bow to your prowess!
No need to be a jerk to people who don't subscribe to your method.
But here's the thing- I've NEVER poured out a "green beer". Never.
A well made beer doesn't need that long to condition. I can drink it as soon as it's carbed up, if made properly. I have one recipe I make all the time (oatmeal stout) that needs about two weeks after fermention is over to meld and condition a bit, for the flavors to blend. Otherwise, they are fine at bottling or kegging.
A long conditioning time might cover up some brewing mistakes, but I'd rather just fix the brewing mistakes and forgo the lengthy conditioning. I've made over 300 batches of beer, so I'm speaking from experience on this.
Is there some magical peak that is supposed to happen prior to week 3 in bottles, that I have somehow been missing?
A well made beer doesn't need that long to condition. I can drink it as soon as it's carbed up, if made properly.
A long conditioning time might cover up some brewing mistakes, but I'd rather just fix the brewing mistakes and forgo the lengthy conditioning.
But here's the thing- I've NEVER poured out a "green beer". Never.
A well made beer doesn't need that long to condition. I can drink it as soon as it's carbed up, if made properly. I have one recipe I make all the time (oatmeal stout) that needs about two weeks after fermention is over to meld and condition a bit, for the flavors to blend. Otherwise, they are fine at bottling or kegging.
A long conditioning time might cover up some brewing mistakes, but I'd rather just fix the brewing mistakes and forgo the lengthy conditioning. I've made over 300 batches of beer, so I'm speaking from experience on this.
I say taste it - it will help you understand how a beer develops. Not helping am I?
A little of topic, but, do you think if enough of us keep repeating this enough that it will ever catch on and rid us of the dogma of the long conditioning time being the best way to make beer?
Funny. I've started a war here...
IffyG said:Unfortunately, a very vocal minority pushes the long primary as gospel around here. However, as with almost everything else in homebrewing, there is quite a bit of personal preference.
I think the "push" for a long primary/conditioning thing is really a statement that it is OK, and sometimes preferred, to have a long primary/conditioning time. When in doubt, wait it out. Too many folks rush their beers. So, as a way to deter this, the mantra has been "3 weeks in primary, 3 weeks in bottles". I have come around to the idea that 3 weeks is not necessary, though it certainly will not hurt. Some beers are done in 7 days and fully carbed in another 10. But this doesn't mean you can't leave it for 21 days in primary (or more) and 21 days in the bottle (or more).
Unfortunately, this has lead to the idea that a beer MUST be left in primary for 3-4 weeks and bottle conditioned for 3 weeks otherwise you risk having bad beer. Brewing is much much too dynamic to pigeonhole every beer into the same timeline.
I made a beer last year that was truly awful. It tasted like someone mixed brown sugar and gasoline. I let it sit for about 6 weeks and it didn't get any better so I ended up dumping all but a 12pk of it. I needed the bottles. I forgot all about that 12pk until last week when I was moving some stuff around the basement and noticed it sitting in a forgotten corner. On a whim I put one in the fridge and tried it a few days later.
Lo and behold, my hot mess of a beer had finally grown up. Now its still not a great brew but its more than drinkable. What was once an overwhelming sweetness had mellowed into a nice malt backbone. The hot alcohol burn had completely disappeared. And while the flavor of centennial hops was not distinguishable there was a pronounced bitterness that balanced the malt well. In retrospect I wish I had cellared it all but for now I'll enjoy my CT-A3 Centennial American Amber Ale and know going forward that time truly is on my side.
Heh. Not exactly what the OP was after, here, but a great entry to Revvy's "never dump your beer" thread.
Right, Im completely off topic but I just wanted to tell my beer story.
I should go find that that thread and post there.