ersheff
Well-Known Member
Hey, y'all.
So, my problem's in the title. I brew partial mash and all-grain, usually 2.5 gallon batches (due to stovetop boil limitations) though my most recent one was a 5 gallon partial.
Anyway, I've got 2 finished beers in bottles.
One is a cream ale that was good but not great when it was ready (2 weeks or so after bottling). I overshot my OG, so it was a little too intense for a cream ale, but it was drinkable. Now, a couple of months after it finished carbing, it's kind of gross. Not unbearably nasty, just a bit "off" from what it once was.
The other is a Rye Pale Ale that I actually quite liked. I actually UNDERSHOT my OG on that one (the one time I can say that I was truly very toasty on brew day), but not by too much. I dry hopped it and it came out almost like a session Rye IPA. Again, this one is not as good after a month or so (but still more drinkable than the cream ale).
This whole pattern happened last year too when I made a partial mash modified Zombie Dust clone. That beer was GREAT for a month or two (my favorite that I've made) but not so much afterwards.
Any idea what's going on? I don't think it's an infection, because I have seen those in a couple of bottles from other batches (foam like crazy when opened) and I'm confident in my bottling sanitation. If it was an infection from earlier in the brewing process, I would suspect that it would be noticeable sooner.
I've also had beer that greatly improved with age, even though it wasn't super high ABV. A pumpkin dubbel that I made a couple of years ago (second batch ever) was "meh" for about a year, then the couple of year old bottles that I kept way in the back of the cabinet were GREAT after sitting for so long.
Perhaps my non-belgian beer just has a very short shelf life? Or maybe I'm storing it too warm? I'm cleaning everything and sanitizing with StarSan (and not rinsing).
I've got a Red IPA (from Radical Brewing book) in the fermenter right now, and I hope that it can avoid the same fate!
Thanks!
So, my problem's in the title. I brew partial mash and all-grain, usually 2.5 gallon batches (due to stovetop boil limitations) though my most recent one was a 5 gallon partial.
Anyway, I've got 2 finished beers in bottles.
One is a cream ale that was good but not great when it was ready (2 weeks or so after bottling). I overshot my OG, so it was a little too intense for a cream ale, but it was drinkable. Now, a couple of months after it finished carbing, it's kind of gross. Not unbearably nasty, just a bit "off" from what it once was.
The other is a Rye Pale Ale that I actually quite liked. I actually UNDERSHOT my OG on that one (the one time I can say that I was truly very toasty on brew day), but not by too much. I dry hopped it and it came out almost like a session Rye IPA. Again, this one is not as good after a month or so (but still more drinkable than the cream ale).
This whole pattern happened last year too when I made a partial mash modified Zombie Dust clone. That beer was GREAT for a month or two (my favorite that I've made) but not so much afterwards.
Any idea what's going on? I don't think it's an infection, because I have seen those in a couple of bottles from other batches (foam like crazy when opened) and I'm confident in my bottling sanitation. If it was an infection from earlier in the brewing process, I would suspect that it would be noticeable sooner.
I've also had beer that greatly improved with age, even though it wasn't super high ABV. A pumpkin dubbel that I made a couple of years ago (second batch ever) was "meh" for about a year, then the couple of year old bottles that I kept way in the back of the cabinet were GREAT after sitting for so long.
Perhaps my non-belgian beer just has a very short shelf life? Or maybe I'm storing it too warm? I'm cleaning everything and sanitizing with StarSan (and not rinsing).
I've got a Red IPA (from Radical Brewing book) in the fermenter right now, and I hope that it can avoid the same fate!
Thanks!