I first got into brewing a few years ago, but stopped because all of my brew had a similar smell and flavor. About a year ago, I started back in and I made the best beer I'd ever made. I was concerned about the results, so I only made a 2.5 gallon batch.
For Christmas, I made a vanilla gingerbread stout. I pitched one vial of yeast and I let the beer cool in the freezer, which took much longer than I thought it would. The finished product was....."meh"...the alcohol flavor was very obvious and it had a flavor and aroma that I attributed to the clove called for in the recipe.
Brings us to this past weekend. I went back and revisited the recipe that was so great before, but I doubled everything for a 5 gallon batch. I also made a starter for this one, and used my immersion chiller because I wanted it to be perfect. It cooled in 20 minutes and fermented for 3 weeks. Fermentation was done in 3 days (constant gravity for 3 days). I kegged it this past Saturday, and upon trying it, was reminded of that same smell and aroma from the old beers I made. It was very similar to the original recipe of the 2.5 gallon batch that was so good, but over the top of it was just that familiar taste/smell. I'm hoping some conditioning in the keg (I also bottled 6 bottles as a test) will eliminate it. I'm used to waiting 2 weeks before cracking open a bottle, as this is only my second kegged batch.
What could be going on? I'm extract brewing. Boiling for whatever my longest hop addition calls for. Using 4 gallons of water in my boil, then topping off to just under 5 gallons. Pretty sure it's not a sanitation issue. Cooling isn't an issue. My only thoughts are maybe my fermentation temps are too high and making some DMS. I've been storing my wort in a closet that sits at 65 degrees, which would knock up ferm. temp to 72ish internal. My WLP004 is within that spectrum. I read about how moving the wort to a warmer area after it was done fermenting was the best way to get the yeast to clean up everything, so I moved it out into the room after it was done, which is 72 degrees.
Holy crap that's a wall of text. Sincerest thanks to anyone who trudges through all that and helps me out.
Bonus question: Is all grain going to make a big difference in my brewing? My ingredients are fresh, so that's not an issue. I know it gives some more flexibility in my ingredients and subtle flavors, but if it's what's keeping my beer tasting like this, I'm ready to go for it.
For Christmas, I made a vanilla gingerbread stout. I pitched one vial of yeast and I let the beer cool in the freezer, which took much longer than I thought it would. The finished product was....."meh"...the alcohol flavor was very obvious and it had a flavor and aroma that I attributed to the clove called for in the recipe.
Brings us to this past weekend. I went back and revisited the recipe that was so great before, but I doubled everything for a 5 gallon batch. I also made a starter for this one, and used my immersion chiller because I wanted it to be perfect. It cooled in 20 minutes and fermented for 3 weeks. Fermentation was done in 3 days (constant gravity for 3 days). I kegged it this past Saturday, and upon trying it, was reminded of that same smell and aroma from the old beers I made. It was very similar to the original recipe of the 2.5 gallon batch that was so good, but over the top of it was just that familiar taste/smell. I'm hoping some conditioning in the keg (I also bottled 6 bottles as a test) will eliminate it. I'm used to waiting 2 weeks before cracking open a bottle, as this is only my second kegged batch.
What could be going on? I'm extract brewing. Boiling for whatever my longest hop addition calls for. Using 4 gallons of water in my boil, then topping off to just under 5 gallons. Pretty sure it's not a sanitation issue. Cooling isn't an issue. My only thoughts are maybe my fermentation temps are too high and making some DMS. I've been storing my wort in a closet that sits at 65 degrees, which would knock up ferm. temp to 72ish internal. My WLP004 is within that spectrum. I read about how moving the wort to a warmer area after it was done fermenting was the best way to get the yeast to clean up everything, so I moved it out into the room after it was done, which is 72 degrees.
Holy crap that's a wall of text. Sincerest thanks to anyone who trudges through all that and helps me out.
Bonus question: Is all grain going to make a big difference in my brewing? My ingredients are fresh, so that's not an issue. I know it gives some more flexibility in my ingredients and subtle flavors, but if it's what's keeping my beer tasting like this, I'm ready to go for it.