Easterbrook
Active Member
Is there a direct connection between high ABV and the sweetness of the finished/fermented beer?
For example, the higher ABV commercial beers I've had, such as Dogfish Head 120 Minute, Dogfish Head Fort, and various high ABV barely wines, strong ales and stouts (like 14% ABV+), have tasted sickly sweet to me.
I ask because I sometimes see recipes for really high gravity beers that look interesting to me, but I don't want my finished beer to be sickly sweet. I realize you need the sugars for the yeast to convert into alcohol, but in the commercial beers I listed above, it seems like there's still a ton of sugar left after fermentation is complete.
Is that just the nature of high ABV beers? Should I expect anything in the 12%+ ABV range to taste really sweet? Is it the alcohol that I'm perceiving as being sweet?
For example, the higher ABV commercial beers I've had, such as Dogfish Head 120 Minute, Dogfish Head Fort, and various high ABV barely wines, strong ales and stouts (like 14% ABV+), have tasted sickly sweet to me.
I ask because I sometimes see recipes for really high gravity beers that look interesting to me, but I don't want my finished beer to be sickly sweet. I realize you need the sugars for the yeast to convert into alcohol, but in the commercial beers I listed above, it seems like there's still a ton of sugar left after fermentation is complete.
Is that just the nature of high ABV beers? Should I expect anything in the 12%+ ABV range to taste really sweet? Is it the alcohol that I'm perceiving as being sweet?