EddieTheBrewerLADET
Well-Known Member
This is a 90 Min Clone...3 weeks in Primary, post 2 days of gelatin...whats wrong?

This is a 90 Min Clone...3 weeks in Primary, post 2 days of gelatin...whats wrong?
It's murky
But it may just need a little settling time. OR, a variety of other brewing processes that can lead to cloudy beer. OR, the yeast strain.
The REAL deal-breaker is the taste. How does it taste?
lots of suspended protein causing a chill haze? some beers just don't seem to clear up, especially cold. if it tastes good with no off flavors then its just one of them things.
Time too. I bottle, and I often find that the clearing process is relatively slow. The first week it will look like it won't clear, but after two weeks things definitively change. I've not yet had a beer that doesn't clear after a couple of months, but really, you'd want them to clear in 2-3 weeks without isinglass or gelatine.
So...you all really don't think this signals a problem based on the pics and scenario??
Also, what is it that allows it to clarify much further in bottles than in the fermenter?
With this haze now... Does or does that not guarantee me chill haze?
The flavor will be different when a beer is uncarbed and unchilled (think of flat, warm coke and how it compares to a fresh one from the fridge). The carbonation adds an acidity to the beverage that helps mute/cancel some of the sweetness. When the sweetness subdues then the bitterness becomes more pronounced and the beverage becomes a little more "dry". Additionally, after pouring a carbonated beer, the carbonation begins leaving solution and begins releasing the aromatics of the beverage (i.e. the hops, the malt character, etc), which is why you generally don't want an ice cold beverage because it doesn't release it's co2 as quickly (therefore it hides the character too much). A freshly poured 38-42F beer is perfect in my book because it gives it some room to warm up and "show" itself even more over several minutes.Also, uncarbed and unchilled will the flavor be different? Specifically, bitterness, hop aroma and maltiness.