trumpetbeard
Well-Known Member
So I've checked the many (there are waaayyy too many) threads on the effects of aging big beers and have found conflicting information on aging tripels.
Conventional wisdom, and most of the recommendations I've found, state that beers above 8.5% abv should spend at least 6 months in the bottle. However, I've also seen many people suggest that tripels taste best about 3-4 months after fermentation.
I have about 2 gallons of a huge tripel (my hydrometer broke during the brew but beersmith puts it at ~10.3% [it was a small batch that attenuated way more than I was expecting and my volumes were a little suspect to begin with]), and right now there's some good things happening, but all of that is overshadowed by some serious fusel alcohol taste. Like, there's some good belgian estery flavors and some nice fruit, citrus, and earthy saaz notes, but all of that plays second fiddle to hot alcohol. Some bottles have been worse than others.
So I guess my question is What can I expect to come from aging this brew? Will the mellowing of the fusels merit the fading of the hop presence? For those of you with lots of experience with big belgians, will the flavor profile become more complex or less with time in the bottle? Because it was a small batch I want to make sure I enjoy it at it's peak.
Thanks for your help. I'd be happy to post the recipe and process if it helps.
Conventional wisdom, and most of the recommendations I've found, state that beers above 8.5% abv should spend at least 6 months in the bottle. However, I've also seen many people suggest that tripels taste best about 3-4 months after fermentation.
I have about 2 gallons of a huge tripel (my hydrometer broke during the brew but beersmith puts it at ~10.3% [it was a small batch that attenuated way more than I was expecting and my volumes were a little suspect to begin with]), and right now there's some good things happening, but all of that is overshadowed by some serious fusel alcohol taste. Like, there's some good belgian estery flavors and some nice fruit, citrus, and earthy saaz notes, but all of that plays second fiddle to hot alcohol. Some bottles have been worse than others.
So I guess my question is What can I expect to come from aging this brew? Will the mellowing of the fusels merit the fading of the hop presence? For those of you with lots of experience with big belgians, will the flavor profile become more complex or less with time in the bottle? Because it was a small batch I want to make sure I enjoy it at it's peak.
Thanks for your help. I'd be happy to post the recipe and process if it helps.