DonRikkles
Well-Known Member
I had the first sip of my kolsch tonight, and it was a long time coming. I brewed it in early March, it spend a month in primary, and then two months lagering around 35 degrees. It tasted as it should, light, crisp, subtly grainy with very light fermentation notes. It's clear and it's nicely carbonated; I like it a lot.
The only problem,.. is that it's too dark. I'm not sure of the color, maybe a light 6-8, pale gold or copper, but very very pale. Almost like the color went through the wash and faded. What could have caused the color to be dark? I don't think anything in my grain bill did. Did I carmelize something in the kettle?
Here's my recipe:
3 gal | 1.049 OG | 1.005 FG | 5.8% ABV
5.5 lbs pils
.5 lbs wheat malt
1 oz Hallertauer @ 60
.25 oz Hallertauer @ 20
Wyeast 2565
Pitched and fermented at 62.
The only problem,.. is that it's too dark. I'm not sure of the color, maybe a light 6-8, pale gold or copper, but very very pale. Almost like the color went through the wash and faded. What could have caused the color to be dark? I don't think anything in my grain bill did. Did I carmelize something in the kettle?
Here's my recipe:
3 gal | 1.049 OG | 1.005 FG | 5.8% ABV
5.5 lbs pils
.5 lbs wheat malt
1 oz Hallertauer @ 60
.25 oz Hallertauer @ 20
Wyeast 2565
Pitched and fermented at 62.