Get advice on making beer from raw ingredients (malt, hops, water and yeast)
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beer gut
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by beer gut » Mon Nov 16, 2009 10:04 pm
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Zatoichi
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by Zatoichi » Mon Nov 16, 2009 11:24 pm
Medicinal tastes are usually attributed to fusel alcohol which can be produced from fermentation temps that are too high. Given time most of these should mellow out. My first thoughts to your dilemma led me to think you had not treated your brewing liquor to remove chloramines, but as you have not encountered it before i reckon its your fermentation temps.
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beer gut
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by beer gut » Mon Nov 16, 2009 11:37 pm
Thanx for the great advice i ferment my beer in a cuboard under the stairs the temps range from 69f/72f is this to high? caus the yeasts i use come from brew labs i follow there tempretures as close as i can.Will these strange tastes fade?
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Zatoichi
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by Zatoichi » Mon Nov 16, 2009 11:43 pm
Your temps sound fine, what hops did you use? the taste should mellow with time unless dread of dreads you have an infection, but i doubt this from your description.
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beer gut
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by beer gut » Tue Nov 17, 2009 10:24 pm
The hops i used where challenger, east kent goldings and progress.i have used theese hops before and i have never incounterd this before.
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beer gut
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by beer gut » Thu Nov 19, 2009 12:49 pm
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floydmeddler
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by floydmeddler » Thu Nov 19, 2009 11:10 pm
I don't think they are harmful healthwise. However, they are to the old taste buds! My batch was completely undrinkable. Seriously tasted like somebody poured a gallon of TCP in there. It went down the shower drain. F*cking heartbreaking experience.
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mysterio
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by mysterio » Thu Nov 19, 2009 11:15 pm
Any chlorine/bleach in your process. That's the number one cause of medicinal tastes.
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beer gut
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by beer gut » Fri Nov 20, 2009 1:01 am
Hi everyone and thanx for all the advice

i have one last question as iam new to all grain brewing, what sterlizing liquid should i use? caus everyone i have spoke to says to use a cholrine/bleach product for sterlizing.My red bitter is not realy that strong of a medicine taste it's just there in the back ground, so what i will do is me and my brewing friend will drink it and i won't give anybody a bottle to try like i normally do, i have already had 3 bottles and iam ok, i think if they was any real trace of bleach my gut's would now be disolved and i would be in a body bag and i would hopefully would be in the great real ale bar in the sky.
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dave-o
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by dave-o » Fri Nov 20, 2009 11:05 am
beer gut wrote: i have one last question as iam new to all grain brewing, what sterlizing liquid should i use? .
Sodium Metabisulphate solution. The same stuff as you get in Campden tablets.
I use 1tsp per litre for sterilising and 1 tsp per 20l for treating water.
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coatesg
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by coatesg » Fri Nov 20, 2009 4:57 pm
dave-o wrote:Sodium Metabisulphate solution. The same stuff as you get in Campden tablets.
I use 1tsp per litre for sterilising and 1 tsp per 20l for treating water.
Sodium met is not strong enough for sanitising equipment like fermenters. For getting rid of chlorine/chloramines in your water it is fine (as described or 1/2 to 1 campden tablet per 25L is fine). This helps to eliminate one source of phenol production (chlorine reacts with compounds from the malt to give phenolic, TCP/bandaid tastes).
For
sanitising use either a chlorine based steriliser like VWP or diluted, thin bleach, with a really good rinse with clean water afterwards, or a no-rinse sanitiser like iodophor, starsan and even boiling water (lots). Either way, you need to try to ensure there is little free chlorine being carried into the brew. There's a whole section devoted to it
here.
Good luck!
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floydmeddler
- Telling everyone Your My Best Mate
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by floydmeddler » Sun Nov 22, 2009 9:05 am
coatesg wrote:
For sanitising use...diluted, thin bleach...!
Howdy. Why must it be diluted thin bleach? Why not diluted thick bleach?
Cheers
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coatesg
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by coatesg » Sun Nov 22, 2009 9:40 pm
floydmeddler wrote:Howdy. Why must it be diluted thin bleach? Why not diluted thick bleach?
By design, it's harder to rinse off! (Plus the plain, scentless thin bleach is really cheap - something like 25p for 2 litres for Sainsbury's own)