NoIguanaForZ
Well-Known Member
This is counterintuitive
"Counterintuitive" you say?
I suspect you mean either "obtuse" or "disingenuous." Or both.
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This is counterintuitive
I feel as though I understand what you're describing, and think I understand where you're trying to go with this, AND agree that it's probably a worthwhile thread/venture to put the effort in to. I also recognize that your "crazy" ideas are about as well received as Einstein's or Newton's were in their time. Stick with it and don't give up on us just yet
I'll put in some red comments below:
TA (titratable acidity) is more important than pH in the world of sour beers, but coupled with pH makes for a very good indicator of "how sour" a beer is. pH alone can be very deceiving and unreliable.
...and few people are even willing to talk about it in a useful way.
You mentioned saltiness as also countering sweetness...... I totally agree with this and have often used the two in opposition to each other. Interestingly saltiness also cuts or mellows sourness...... try salt on grapefruit for example, Bitterness and sourness really are parallel properties, as they do not offset or mask each other, but saltiness is a completely different dimension of taste. Note that bitterness in beer is related to acids, just as sourness is. The two are definitely cousins. Umami? I've heard the term, but have no idea what it means. Sweetness, sourness, and bitterness all lie on the same two dimensional plain, with sweetness lying on one side of the equator, and the other two properties lying in differing parts of the other half. Sourness and bitterness are not absolute values, the terms represent a range of chemical signals that we perceive as flavor. In the end they represent a multitude of flavors. There comes a point where it is difficult to distinguish between the two.... or the three. Is what you are tasting sweet, sour, or bitter... it may have elements of all three and be difficult to pin one of our simplistic and limited vocabulary of words to describe flavors to it. We've all tasted things and not had words to describe the taste other than to compare it to other food items we have all presumably tasted. Hop descriptions are full of this with terms like stone fruit, pine forest, earthy, spicy nobel, citrus.
Clearly we cannot address the full range of flavor elements here........That would be the work of a lifetime.... or several. I'm proposing addressing only 3 flavor elements and how they interact, and few people are even willing to talk about it in a useful way. Nothing useful is obviously likely to come from this. It would be nice to be able to plant a seed at least, that someday might give brewers one more tool to work with.
H.W.
Ive decided to name my sour IPA that will be ready in a month or so the garbelizer
From my understanding, it shouldn't taste like anything, right? The perfect "creeper" beer
A possible basis for a scale that you are talking about:
BU:GU we all know of
Let AU:GU be similar, but for acid units (based on titratable acidity)
Then we could use BU:GU + C*(AU:GU) for the overall effect where C is a coefficient to be empirically determined.
I of course didn't say sour and bitter were opposite, I said they were parallel.