GrizzlyBier
Active Member
I've read that Krausen falling back into the beer imparts harsh flavors. My question is how do you avoid it? Whether in a carboy or a conical, how is one supposed to remove that krausen?
Thanks!
Thanks!
I've read that Krausen falling back into the beer imparts harsh flavors. My question is how do you avoid it? Whether in a carboy or a conical, how is one supposed to remove that krausen?
Thanks!
Some people skim the krausen but I think that is mostly for harvesting yeast.
I prevent it from falling back in by inverting the bucket above my head when I feel it's near the danger zone. That way gravity is on my side.The sure-fire way to prevent it is to not pitch the yeast.
Top cropping is as far as I'm aware one of the commoner forms of yeast harvesting and gives you the healthiest yeast with no detriment to the ferment.What am I missing here?
Krausen skimming for yeast harvesting seems very inefficient. Why upset an active fermentation?
You would still need to separate the gunk - extraneous wort protein, hop resins, and dead yeast.
Think I'll stick to harvesting from the bottom of the fermenter - when the yeast is done........
To the OP - krausen = good.
What am I missing here?
Krausen skimming for yeast harvesting seems very inefficient. Why upset an active fermentation?
You would still need to separate the gunk - extraneous wort protein, hop resins, and dead yeast.
Think I'll stick to harvesting from the bottom of the fermenter - when the yeast is done........
To the OP - krausen = good.
I've read that the dark colored gunk that typically sticks to the sides of the fermentor is bitter and that one should avoid knocking that into the beer. So it is not that krausen shouldn't go into the beer it is this brown goo that shouldn't, and is easily avoided by just letting the process naturally take place.
I've read that Krausen falling back into the beer imparts harsh flavors. My question is how do you avoid it? Whether in a carboy or a conical, how is one supposed to remove that krausen?
Thanks!
"Attaching a blow-off tube is advisable and necessary to remove the brown Kraeusen. The latter gives the beer a harsh taste if it is allowed to fall back into the beer."
This was taken from Braukaiser's page on brewing hefewiezen in the beginning of the Primary Fermentation section. I dont know if it's true, so I won't speculate.
http://braukaiser.com/wiki/index.php?
title=Weissbier_Hell
What does everyone think?
Would you supply a source for this? I've never read it, wonder what I might be missing here.
"Attaching a blow-off tube is advisable and necessary to remove the brown Kraeusen. The latter gives the beer a harsh taste if it is allowed to fall back into the beer."
This was taken from Braukaiser's page on brewing hefewiezen in the beginning of the Primary Fermentation section. I dont know if it's true, so I won't speculate.
http://braukaiser.com/wiki/index.php?title=Weissbier_Hell
What does everyone think?
Interesting. I don't know everything about brewing--far from it--but I've never heard anything about "removing the brown Kraeusen." And using a blowoff tube to do it? It's as if the author wants a blowout, something I think most of us would avoid.
The page was last modified in 2010, makes me wonder if the material is dated--or if it's only relevant to the style.
Can't remember right now...So WHERE did you read that? The provenance of that statement matters.