olie
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- Oct 9, 2017
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1-batch n00b here. The recipes that I'm looking at all say "...then let condition for x-y weeks" (2-3 seems common).
This question is not about whether 2 or 3 or some other number is the right amount of weeks!
What I'm more curious about is the various visual (or other physically measurable) clues that the beer is fully (or > 95% or whatever) "conditioned", which I understand to mean that the yeast, having eaten all the sugar during fermentation, has then proceeded to polish off all the various proteins and whatnot.
The only one I [think I] know is that the beer becomes more-clear as proteins get eaten and yeast and other "gunk" settles out. However, (a) I'm not certain about that, (b) it seems rather subjective and (c) it's harder with darker beers.
So what else is there besides time & clarity to indicate that one's beer is fully ("close enough") conditioned?
Thanks!
This question is not about whether 2 or 3 or some other number is the right amount of weeks!
What I'm more curious about is the various visual (or other physically measurable) clues that the beer is fully (or > 95% or whatever) "conditioned", which I understand to mean that the yeast, having eaten all the sugar during fermentation, has then proceeded to polish off all the various proteins and whatnot.
The only one I [think I] know is that the beer becomes more-clear as proteins get eaten and yeast and other "gunk" settles out. However, (a) I'm not certain about that, (b) it seems rather subjective and (c) it's harder with darker beers.
So what else is there besides time & clarity to indicate that one's beer is fully ("close enough") conditioned?
Thanks!