papa87
Member
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2012
- Messages
- 23
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Hey guys, relatively new here, only about 5 batches deep but successfully in the realm of AG now. I searched around on the internet only to find vague and contradictory answers to my questions. My brother (completely oblivious to beers, a BMC guy), asked me the other day after sampling a homebrew, "Hey this is sweet, did you add sugar to this?". At first I wanted to scoff of course, but then it dawned on me that I couldn't have thoroughly explained the sweetness he was tasting. I wondered how the tastable sugar/sweetness makes it's way into the final product. I'm aware of hop concentrations, etc. and the effect they have. I'm not really going in that direction with my question..... So is sweetness in a beer lended to unfermentable sugars, that make their way through fermentation unaffected by yeast? Or does the yeast simply not use all the fermentable sugar? The latter of the two questions makes me wonder why fermentation would stop, if fermentable sugar remained.