First a bit of background on me... I homebrewed for about 2 years in 2009 - directly to bottles. I hated the extra work and time that bottles required so I vowed to take a break from brewing until I set myself up to keg... enter 2014!
My innaugural run with my old (limited) experience and new kegging equipment was a double brew on a Saturday morning several weeks back. I had purchased materials to brew a Belgian Dubbel clone and planned to use a leftover (from 2009 or 2010) Belgian Whit kit that I had. I of course used fresh yeast, corriander and dried orange peel but figured the LME was OK to use since it was sealed.
I first noticed that things were "darker" than I expected when I opened the liquid malt extract. It was the color of molasses and I was expecting something lighter. It tasted and smelled fine and didn't have any visable settling or seperating that I noticed - so I figured it was OK. It was a 2 gallon boil so the color wasn't lightened much at all during the boil.
**one other note, since I was brewing two batches at once - I used for this batch a burner on the stove that seems weaker than the rest. Hitting boil (even with just 2 gallons) took forever - and there was NO noticeable hot break**
I finished the boiled, cooled quickly with my immersion chiller and moved to primary for 6 days and a secondary for 4 days.
So here is my question... what could have taken this light colored Whit and made it so dark? Could it have been my forever boil (closer to 90 minutes from the time I cranked up the heat on the stove to HIGH), could it have been old, no good LME, could the LME have been mislabeled and actually not been what the recipe called for? I sampled the beer after fermenting and it pretty much tastes like New Castle Brown Ale to me...
Here is a pic of my evil, dark-hearted whit beer (it's in front). Pic was taken 8 hours after kegging/carbonating and most of the "head" is StarSan being cleaned out of the fluid lines.
...by the way - the Belgian Dubbel turned out GREAT!
My innaugural run with my old (limited) experience and new kegging equipment was a double brew on a Saturday morning several weeks back. I had purchased materials to brew a Belgian Dubbel clone and planned to use a leftover (from 2009 or 2010) Belgian Whit kit that I had. I of course used fresh yeast, corriander and dried orange peel but figured the LME was OK to use since it was sealed.
I first noticed that things were "darker" than I expected when I opened the liquid malt extract. It was the color of molasses and I was expecting something lighter. It tasted and smelled fine and didn't have any visable settling or seperating that I noticed - so I figured it was OK. It was a 2 gallon boil so the color wasn't lightened much at all during the boil.
**one other note, since I was brewing two batches at once - I used for this batch a burner on the stove that seems weaker than the rest. Hitting boil (even with just 2 gallons) took forever - and there was NO noticeable hot break**
I finished the boiled, cooled quickly with my immersion chiller and moved to primary for 6 days and a secondary for 4 days.
So here is my question... what could have taken this light colored Whit and made it so dark? Could it have been my forever boil (closer to 90 minutes from the time I cranked up the heat on the stove to HIGH), could it have been old, no good LME, could the LME have been mislabeled and actually not been what the recipe called for? I sampled the beer after fermenting and it pretty much tastes like New Castle Brown Ale to me...
Here is a pic of my evil, dark-hearted whit beer (it's in front). Pic was taken 8 hours after kegging/carbonating and most of the "head" is StarSan being cleaned out of the fluid lines.
...by the way - the Belgian Dubbel turned out GREAT!
