novice to early-intermediate lambic drinker here, basic question:
what's the cause of burnt rubber/tire flavors that sometimes come up?
from messing around recently, i seem to be more sensitive to it if i've eaten a lot of salt through the day, or have pretty gnarly palate fatigue going on. i also seem to pick it up more at colder serving temperatures, and younger gueuzes. last night, i put a bottle of 3f og (jan 2013 bottling) in the fridge for a couple hours, and each glass i poured i noticed less. had the bottle sitting out on the table throughout consuming it, over the course of 90 minutes or so. probably originally popped in the high 40*F range or so, and warmed over time.
it's been pretty prevalent to me in the couple of bottles of this vintage i've consumed, but haven't noticed it on older bottles. so, where i'm going is, is this something that gets cleaned up over time, or are other factors skewing my experiences? i don't recall ever getting any in the 2009 or 2010 375s i drank. also, i seem to pick up on it a lot more with 3f than cantillon or tilquin or similar age.
phenols? i doubt it'd be chlorophenol. but wtf do i know.
i've had my bottles stored in a dark central closet in cases, and keep the house at 72*F. don't have a proper cellar fridge yet. however, with such young bottles i'd assume that this wouldn't be something created by storage conditions, when i've only had the bottles for a few months.
maybe other environmental elements are causing me to have a heightened sensitivity to something. idk. it's distracting enough to be irritating and overpower the bright lemony fruity sourness for me, which is a shame.
or maybe my tongue is a ******.