Chaosbourne
Member
So I've had two or three beers display the same problem and I'm trying to figure out if I have a contamination problem after primary (or even secondary) fermentation. I always thought it was harder to contaminate a beer after primary due to the alcohol, but I seemed to have accomplished it.
Long story short: two of the beers I have made have been extremely light in color, using only wheat and pilsner malts. After primary I've given it a taste and it seems great! Young, but still very good. It is light in color as well.
But after two weeks in the secondary or even after kegging it, the beer becomes somewhat red in color and has a very sweet/off flavor to it. Its not sour by any means, but it doesn't taste like beer. I did dry hop one of the batches that turned out this way, but not both. The only source of contamination I can think of would be the drop tube/out spout/whatever you call it in the corny. I do typically do my secondary in a corny, though I'm beginning to think that I shouldn't.
Are there strains of bacteria that will actually DARKEN the beer? Has anyone else had this problem? I'd like to stop ruining 5 gallons of beer at a time!
Long story short: two of the beers I have made have been extremely light in color, using only wheat and pilsner malts. After primary I've given it a taste and it seems great! Young, but still very good. It is light in color as well.
But after two weeks in the secondary or even after kegging it, the beer becomes somewhat red in color and has a very sweet/off flavor to it. Its not sour by any means, but it doesn't taste like beer. I did dry hop one of the batches that turned out this way, but not both. The only source of contamination I can think of would be the drop tube/out spout/whatever you call it in the corny. I do typically do my secondary in a corny, though I'm beginning to think that I shouldn't.
Are there strains of bacteria that will actually DARKEN the beer? Has anyone else had this problem? I'd like to stop ruining 5 gallons of beer at a time!