BrodieBruce
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2013
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 3
Hi everyone, I'm looking for some assistance in identifying the source of an off flavor I have in some of my homebrews. I can't determine the best way to describe this flavor either unfortunately but there is also an "off" aroma associated with it. The best descriptor I can think of is to call it sweet/alcoholic. I have only identified this in my heavily hopped and dry hopped beers, beers I've made with fewer than about 3-4 ounces of hops taste great. Here are the details for my recent IPA that gave me this flavor:
I use St. Louis City tap water. Added 4 grams of gypsum to mash and sparge water. The city uses chloramine and up until now I have never used campden tablets or tried to treat the chloramine, mostly because I was ignorant to its presence.
14 lbs 2 row
0.75 lbs carapils
0.5 lbs carastan
0.75 lbs corn sugar (added at flame out)
Mashed at 150 for 1 hour, used a single batch sparge. Boiled for 90 minutes.
0.5 oz Amarillo FWH
10 ml hopshot 90 mins
1 oz columbus 45 min
1 oz simcoe 20 min
1.5 oz centennial 0 min with 20 min hop stand
2.5 oz simcoe 0 min with 20 min hop stand
Pitched 2L starter of wlp001, temp kept between 66 and 68 F
OG was 1.072. FG 1.006 after 10 days. Hydrometer sample tasted very good.
Dry hop additions with loose pellets into primary.
10 day dry hop with 1.5 oz columbus, 1 oz centennial, 1 oz simcoe
5 day dry hop with 0.5 oz columbus, 0.5 oz simcoe, 0.5 oz amarillo, 0.5 oz centennial
I dry hopped for a total of 10 days with the 2 dry hop additions overlapping for 5 of those days.
Bottled with 3.9 oz corn sugar. The beers were bottled just over 2 weeks ago and are now carbonated.
Summary:
Did not treat my tap water for chloramine. Hydrometer sample pre-dry hop tasted great. Added 5.5 oz dry hops for 10 days total. Beer now has distinct off flavor and aroma that is difficult to describe but has been present in prior hoppy beers. Is it possible that the hops are interacting with the chloramine in my tap water? Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
I use St. Louis City tap water. Added 4 grams of gypsum to mash and sparge water. The city uses chloramine and up until now I have never used campden tablets or tried to treat the chloramine, mostly because I was ignorant to its presence.
14 lbs 2 row
0.75 lbs carapils
0.5 lbs carastan
0.75 lbs corn sugar (added at flame out)
Mashed at 150 for 1 hour, used a single batch sparge. Boiled for 90 minutes.
0.5 oz Amarillo FWH
10 ml hopshot 90 mins
1 oz columbus 45 min
1 oz simcoe 20 min
1.5 oz centennial 0 min with 20 min hop stand
2.5 oz simcoe 0 min with 20 min hop stand
Pitched 2L starter of wlp001, temp kept between 66 and 68 F
OG was 1.072. FG 1.006 after 10 days. Hydrometer sample tasted very good.
Dry hop additions with loose pellets into primary.
10 day dry hop with 1.5 oz columbus, 1 oz centennial, 1 oz simcoe
5 day dry hop with 0.5 oz columbus, 0.5 oz simcoe, 0.5 oz amarillo, 0.5 oz centennial
I dry hopped for a total of 10 days with the 2 dry hop additions overlapping for 5 of those days.
Bottled with 3.9 oz corn sugar. The beers were bottled just over 2 weeks ago and are now carbonated.
Summary:
Did not treat my tap water for chloramine. Hydrometer sample pre-dry hop tasted great. Added 5.5 oz dry hops for 10 days total. Beer now has distinct off flavor and aroma that is difficult to describe but has been present in prior hoppy beers. Is it possible that the hops are interacting with the chloramine in my tap water? Any insight would be greatly appreciated.