It should be the same stuff, food grade vitamin C. 

Also, is everyone getting AA from homebrew shops or elsewhere? My LHBS doesn't carry it. Brewing this weekend and looking for something to come quick.
At 1 g/l you will definitely taste it. That's too much.I might try adding 22 gm vitamin C to 22 litres of beer just before bottling. It won't do any harm I am sure, I have been brewing the same style of beer for many years and so I will be able to detect any significant improvement. Watch this space.
thanks Mcmullan and Miraculix ( M & M )
When I have a cold I add 5 gm vit C to 450 ml water - I can certainly taste that. But 1 gm per litre is 11 times less and masked by malt and hop flavours. And I use 150 gm hops per 22 litres. So I will risk it. Defo report back.
Looking forward to hearing your results! I never tried that much, I'm quite curious now.thanks Mcmullan and Miraculix ( M & M )
When I have a cold I add 5 gm vit C to 450 ml water - I can certainly taste that. But 1 gm per litre is 11 times less and masked by malt and hop flavours. And I use 150 gm hops per 22 litres. So I will risk it. Defo report back.
Exactly what I've been doing, and I swear it makes the beer brighter and last longer.I make sure there is 1tsp in the keg when I transfer the beer from the fermenter. My beer is lasting longer with more consistent flavor. Anecdotal, but hey, we're amateurs.
Based upon what I have done for wine, cider and mead, I would think that the sulfites would inhibit the yeast. I am sure there are a lot of articles in those forums regarding dosage; perhaps there have been experiments where someone did a half dose or quarter dose? Yeast still have some life, and also extra O2 protection?Has anyone tried adding low-dose sulphites to beer at bottling time as an antioxidant and preservative? Would that prevent bottle conditioning?
Probably not as it does not kill yeast (at least not in the amount usually used) but inhibits the yeast from multiplying (is this correct English?).Has anyone tried adding low-dose sulphites to beer at bottling time as an antioxidant and preservative? Would that prevent bottle conditioning?
I tried once with a bottled conditioned Hazy IPA (ish) beer. At the time I did not have a strategy for measuring out the very small amount of a campden tablet that I would need for a single bottle. I just added a tiny amount. It is hard to say if I added too much or too little. In tasting, I felt like that bottle had a little more hop character than the control bottle, but it had much more oxidation than the bottles with the head space purged of air. I did not notice any issues with bottle carbonation.Has anyone tried adding low-dose sulphites to beer at bottling time as an antioxidant and preservative? Would that prevent bottle conditioning?
This is an easy fix, just leave as little head space as possible. We had multiple experiments here that all confirmed it, the air in the head space is the real driver of bottled beer`s oxidation issues. 5mm head space is the save spot for me. Lower and you risk cracked bottles due to thermal expansion of the liquid when temperature changes. 3 mm also worked for me... but to be on the safe side, I use 5mm.I tried once with a bottled conditioned Hazy IPA (ish) beer. At the time I did not have a strategy for measuring out the very small amount of a campden tablet that I would need for a single bottle. I just added a tiny amount. It is hard to say if I added too much or too little. In tasting, I felt like that bottle had a little more hop character than the control bottle, but it had much more oxidation than the bottles with the head space purged of air. I did not notice any issues with bottle carbonation.
My mini trial pointed at the amount of air left in a "standard fill" bottle as being the first issue that needs to be tackled. If you can reduce the amount of air/oxygen in the bottle to start with, likely anti-oxidants can be effective at cleaning up small amount of oxygen.
I to tend to think that oxidation of bottle conditioned beers is an issue that does not get the attention it deserves. In a recent trial batch that I bottled (a trial of US-05, Voss, and Lutra) I recently cracked open 3 bottles that were maybe 6 weeks in the bottle (stored at room temp most of the time). The US-05 bottle was darker with a noticeable oxidation character. The Voss and Lutra bottles did not show a color change but the flavors were bland and muted.
This is something that I have been wanting to cycle back to for a long time (including adding Ascorbic Acid into the trial, with better control over the measured amount added).
https://www.cascadeshomebrew.com/avoid-bottling-oxidation-for-hoppy-beers/
I haven't had a cold for ages either using less Vit C than you. But I reckon that the prime minister down here sealing the borders up tighter than a crabs arse at 50 fathoms has had a lot to do with that.DuncB - But if the beer I drink contains Vit C, I will never get a cold......if ever you are in Kettering UK call in and sample one. Thanks.