Ogri
Well-Known Member
When was the last time you took the spigot off the bottling bucket, disassembled it into its component parts, cleaned then sanitized before re-assembling?
What about the caps you're using? Have you only used one batch of caps for all the batches you bottled?
Its probably the bottles or the bottling bucket, that's what it was for me.
Run the bottles through the dish washer each time on sterilize and replace your b bucket and bottle filler.
When was the last time you took the spigot off the bottling bucket, disassembled it into its component parts, cleaned then sanitized before re-assembling?
JeffoC6 said:I just tasted my recent IPA. I hopped the hell out of it, used distilled water with a little bit of calcium chloride added (thanks Yooper!), was an absolute freak about santitation, have a temperature controlled fermentation chamber, that I kept at 62 degrees (US-05) the entire duration of fermentation, and at bottling, used distilled water to mix my priming sugar with. I'm STILL getting a weird off flavor. See below for the explination of this flavor. Why is this happening to me? I'm using distilled water!
I haven't brewed 1 single batch of homebrew that made me say "wow" since I started this hobby over a year ago. I'm about to give up...
"My homebrew tastes like I'm burping vinyl tubing and plastic bags" Caused by Chlorophenol
What might have happened?
Using bleach to clean your brewing equipment or having highly chlorinated tap water where you live is most likely the culprate for homebrew with a 'plasticy' finish..particularly noticeable when you burp.
Preventative steps / options:
1) Avoid chlorinated water by using distilled water from your local grocer
2) Pre-treat chlorinated tap water by boiling for 15-20 minutes then cooling. This will evaporate chlorine and remove excess amounts from the water.
3) Pre-treat water with a Campden Tablet (potassium metabisulfite). The Campden tablets act as a catalyst for Chlorophenol removal.
Distilled water is no good for brewing, as the distillation process robs the water of essential elements needed for beer. If you are not satisfied with your local tap water, and are going out of your way to pay for distilled, it would beige beneficial in the future to pay an extra dollar for spring water.
Are you filling the bottles from the bottom up with a wand so you are not aerating the beer?
Do you see any bubbles in the hose as you bottle?
JeffoC6 said:Just had a though. When I dry hop, I boil my hop bag in tap water for approx. 3 minutes, then I shake out all the water and let it soak in my distilled water/starsan solution for a few minutes.
Could the boiling in regular tap water bring anything into the fold here?
No and disregard the other comment about distilled water not being good, it's a misinformed comment as you are building up as per Yoop's suggestion
At this point I think you really need to reevaluate your off flavor as we have all chimed in with everything pertaining to phenols and it seems like its something else.....
Either that or you need to contact the provider of the water you're buying and verify it has no chlorine or chloramines in it.
duboman said:No and disregard the other comment about distilled water not being good, it's a misinformed comment as you are building up as per Yoop's suggestion
At this point I think you really need to reevaluate your off flavor as we have all chimed in with everything pertaining to phenols and it seems like its something else.....
Either that or you need to contact the provider of the water you're buying and verify it has no chlorine or chloramines in it.
My opinion is your drinking the beer too green. I have been brewing a long time and I have noticed around 5 weeks in the bottle beers get much better. Those that taste good earlier, have strong flavors that mask the taste of green beer like IPAs or have unique yeast based flavor like wheats.
More dark malt based beers (porters/stouts) and also higher gravity beers(Belgians) ; the better they will taste with age.
There are exceptions and it took me a while to find a sweet spot for the beers I like. If you are brewing American ales, not too dark, not too strong, set one or more in a closet for amonth or two and try it again. Im betting the taste your experiencing is from the yeast.