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Should my condition beer taste close to my finish

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blazingsun81

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Was sampling some of the condition beer as I was bottling it and found that it is not close to what it should be. Everything was done bang on up to this point. Not sure if it is me or if carbonation will bring out more of the flavour.
 
Yeah, tasting at bottling usually just gives you a rough idea of the final carbed and chilled beer. Let is carb up for at least 2 or 3 wks, chill em in the fridge overnight or longer, and it will taste completely different (and probably a lot closer to what you're expecting).


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Good to know thanks.
Someone told me that due to it is an Belgium wit it will taste like a musty sock when it's condition, which means I'm on the right track.
 
Report back after bottle conditioning and let us know how it turns out!


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I usually find the taste between end of fermentation and end of bottling to be night and day. Fermentation tasting does give you a very rough idea of a flavour profile, but carbonation and clarification do wonders for the taste.
 
So the end result is oxygen got in the batch , the rubber stopper was worn down and didn't make a proper seal. The beer has a bit of a tire taste.
 
Will hopefully it does, I use bottle water for the batch. So I thought only thing left would be oxygen in the beer.
 
Depends a bit on style. But, I will say this - 90%+ of my beers that turn out very well, taste quite good from the fermenter. They have all the flavor I would expect, none of the flavors I would not expect. They are flat, and a bit warm - but otherwise - they taste as they "should."

Bigger beers, beers with spices, oak, additions, etc...... those can seem harsh and over the top early on - and aging lets things mellow. But, your "everyday" basic styles will be pretty close if everything is as it should be.

The presence of "off flavors" can age out of a beer - depending on the off flavor.

The descriptor of "rubber/plastic" does sound like chlorine/chloramine as mentioned earlier. What did you use for water? Tap water with chlorine/chloramine as brew water can cause this. Using bleach as sanitizer can leave chlorine behind. Even rinsing/sanitizing with chlorinated water can potentially be an issue - although, not as much as the other possibilities.
 
Good to know,
that could be it I did rinse the carboy out when sanitizing it with tap water, the city I live in has low level of chlorine usually . I requested a pH chart from the city water company from that week I'm curious If that was the cause. I'll let you know what I find
 
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