brewt00l
Well-Known Member
Well, with beer as clear as seen in the photo, I am not sure that there are more protiens existing in my no chill beers than there are in traditionally chilled beers. I mean, if there were, youd be able to see signs that they actually existed at 34F. Wouldnt you?
I'd suspect as such but would still be curious. From what I understand, chill haze is the result of numerous factors and not just your chilling process...made up of proteins and tannis extracted in the mash, impacted by your boil intensity & chilling method, that bind together at lower temps to be visible.
Course, if your kegging and have your keg in the fridge for a period of time to carb/condition, those proteins and tannis are going to bind and drop, you've already precipitated the haze out of the beer & keg with those first couple pulls.
Is that a kegged sample?