Rankinstein
Member
I've seen it mentioned in the forums a number of times and you guys are right, the last few bottles of your homebrew are sadly the best. I just had the second-to-last bottle of my very first batch (partial grain altbier kit) and it wasn't until that bottle that I really identified what "green" tasted like--because it didn't have any of it!
Even though everyone that tried all the previous bottles really enjoyed it, there was always this hint of a weird flavor that I guess only I could taste. Now I'm noticing the same taste in a test bottle from my 2nd batch that's only been in the bottle for a week but now I can finally RDWHAHB since I know that green taste will go away if I give it time.
So for you other newbies in here like me that are tempted to burn through your first few batches the moment they are fizzy--hold a few bottles back a month or two longer than you can stand. The learning experience alone is worth it--the downside is you realize all your bottles would have tasted like that if you could wait.
Maybe one day I'll have a long enough pipeline that a whole batch can age that long...
Even though everyone that tried all the previous bottles really enjoyed it, there was always this hint of a weird flavor that I guess only I could taste. Now I'm noticing the same taste in a test bottle from my 2nd batch that's only been in the bottle for a week but now I can finally RDWHAHB since I know that green taste will go away if I give it time.
So for you other newbies in here like me that are tempted to burn through your first few batches the moment they are fizzy--hold a few bottles back a month or two longer than you can stand. The learning experience alone is worth it--the downside is you realize all your bottles would have tasted like that if you could wait.
Maybe one day I'll have a long enough pipeline that a whole batch can age that long...