JBCSL
Well-Known Member
I had a chance to check the gravity of the darkened beer. In the 3 weeks from my last test just before I cold crashed it, it went from 1.005 to 1.003, so there was a change when the color changed.
The first picture shows a new dark line towards the top of the carboy, where it is either settling or growing.
Looking back at the flask I filled with trub, there appears to now be a thin discolored layer above the other liquid that had cleared out back to normal. (second picture)
The last picture is a glass pulled from each showing the difference in color. Taste wise, the discolored beer isn't bad, just different. The light one has strong peach and brett presence, where as the darker one has more of the leathery character of a Flanders.
For science I added a little corn sugar to the carboy to try to kick up some fermentation, since the OP's bottles cleared after bottle conditioning, to see if that was what sparked the change back. Will report back when I have something to report.
View attachment 1449086760959.jpg
View attachment 1449086774698.jpg
View attachment 1449086831914.jpg
The first picture shows a new dark line towards the top of the carboy, where it is either settling or growing.
Looking back at the flask I filled with trub, there appears to now be a thin discolored layer above the other liquid that had cleared out back to normal. (second picture)
The last picture is a glass pulled from each showing the difference in color. Taste wise, the discolored beer isn't bad, just different. The light one has strong peach and brett presence, where as the darker one has more of the leathery character of a Flanders.
For science I added a little corn sugar to the carboy to try to kick up some fermentation, since the OP's bottles cleared after bottle conditioning, to see if that was what sparked the change back. Will report back when I have something to report.
View attachment 1449086760959.jpg
View attachment 1449086774698.jpg
View attachment 1449086831914.jpg