troglodytes
Well-Known Member
I've had a lot of great brown sours, and I thought, hey, I make great berliners and goses, I'm going to try my hand at something different. I did research on grain bills and came up with a halfway decent looking recipe and decided to use the second runnings from an APA to do a partial partigyle sour brown (I added enough new ingredients to hit my mash pH, color, OG, etc)
Here's the problem...it's now 8 months in the carboy and it does not taste good. There's just something about the flavor combo of the ingredients (namely the roastiness) that just clashes with my house sour blend (which has sacch, lacto, & pedio). It kind of makes you curl your lips as you drink, as it tastes like sour diner coffee.
After this amount of time I know its still developing and will continue to do so, but if I really just don't like the flavor combo now, I never will, right? I mean I could go wild and add oak, or cherries, or something that would introduce new flavors, but I'd hate to throw good ingredients into a bad beer. Have I given it enough to time to call it a dead experiment and move on?
Here's the problem...it's now 8 months in the carboy and it does not taste good. There's just something about the flavor combo of the ingredients (namely the roastiness) that just clashes with my house sour blend (which has sacch, lacto, & pedio). It kind of makes you curl your lips as you drink, as it tastes like sour diner coffee.
After this amount of time I know its still developing and will continue to do so, but if I really just don't like the flavor combo now, I never will, right? I mean I could go wild and add oak, or cherries, or something that would introduce new flavors, but I'd hate to throw good ingredients into a bad beer. Have I given it enough to time to call it a dead experiment and move on?