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Sediment at the bottom of IPA's or other Ales
Sediment at the bottom of IPA's or other Ales
What is this?
I frequently see it on older bottles of IPA. (Not old but bottled 4 weeks ago or more). I taste no difference, I pour it into a glass so it all mixes in. Just wondering what it was, not like the beer went bad it tasted the same as another bottle that didn't have it.
Well it's not so much sediment but it looks almost goopy.. then you mix it around and it becomes all cloudy and sometimes it looks like snowflakes.
I frequently see it on older bottles of IPA. (Not old but bottled 4 weeks ago or more). I taste no difference, I pour it into a glass so it all mixes in. Just wondering what it was, not like the beer went bad it tasted the same as another bottle that didn't have it.
Well it's not so much sediment but it looks almost goopy.. then you mix it around and it becomes all cloudy and sometimes it looks like snowflakes.
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- Seasoned Drinker
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Could it possible be protein?
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f14/commerc ... ks-166055/
fourth post down.
http://www.homebrewtalk.com/f14/commerc ... ks-166055/
fourth post down.
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- Seasoned Drinker
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Nice!
Maybe they should drastically reduce their hop content and triple cold filter.

- Ale's What Cures Ya
- Seasoned Drinker
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Not since I've been to BC, but Red Racer is in a can, and the Bels Two hearted ive gotten from over the border have been bottled within two weeks.
I had a smashbomb IPA from Flying Monkeys back in ontario left and i noticed it on the bottom. Noticed it often on bottles over 4 weeks with Mad Tom, Smashbomb, and Tree Brewing's Hophead. Some of the older bottles of Southern Tier's 2x IPA on the LCBO shelves back in September had this as well.
I had a smashbomb IPA from Flying Monkeys back in ontario left and i noticed it on the bottom. Noticed it often on bottles over 4 weeks with Mad Tom, Smashbomb, and Tree Brewing's Hophead. Some of the older bottles of Southern Tier's 2x IPA on the LCBO shelves back in September had this as well.
Old was a wrong word to use, but I find anything over 4 weeks with an IPA the hop profile is definately off.Ale's What Cures Ya wrote:4 weeks is now what constitutes an old bottle of beer now? Jeez, I have some downright fossils in my basement.
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Something else to consider with IPAs is that oxygen kills hop flavours and aromas, at VERY low concentrations. Many brewers leave their IPAs unfiltered (instead relying on finings, crash cooling, even lagering to clear things up) so that the filter won't add oxygen into the beer. This can lead to ... less than sparkling hop bombs.
IPAs are a bear to bottle well -- it's one of the reasons that fresh kegged and (well-made) casked IPAs often taste better than bottled. And bottling lines have their own challenges. By the time an IPA wends its way through the Beer Store or LCBO ...
FWIW, one of the reasons Sierra Nevada bottle conditions its beers is to use yeast to pick up an residual O2. SN also uses oxygen-scavenging caps ...
IPAs are a bear to bottle well -- it's one of the reasons that fresh kegged and (well-made) casked IPAs often taste better than bottled. And bottling lines have their own challenges. By the time an IPA wends its way through the Beer Store or LCBO ...
FWIW, one of the reasons Sierra Nevada bottle conditions its beers is to use yeast to pick up an residual O2. SN also uses oxygen-scavenging caps ...
- markaberrant
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SN beer is also pretty much fully carbed before it is bottled, they add a very small amount of sugar and yeast to finish it off, that is why you see so little sediment in their bottles.JasonTremblay wrote:FWIW, one of the reasons Sierra Nevada bottle conditions its beers is to use yeast to pick up an residual O2. SN also uses oxygen-scavenging caps ...
- markaberrant
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There is some irony in considering IPAs has having a limited shelf life. The style was developed specifically to last a long journey.
Arguably, even if the hop profile is more enjoyable when fresh, a month or two old IPA that has travelled thousands of miles should taste more authentic.
Arguably, even if the hop profile is more enjoyable when fresh, a month or two old IPA that has travelled thousands of miles should taste more authentic.
Brands are for cattle.
Fans are cash cows.
The herd will consume until consumed.
Fans are cash cows.
The herd will consume until consumed.
the style was developed to last a journey but what we consider IPAs to day have very little in common with the IPAs that were being shipped to IndiaTapsucker wrote:There is some irony in considering IPAs has having a limited shelf life. The style was developed specifically to last a long journey.
Arguably, even if the hop profile is more enjoyable when fresh, a month or two old IPA that has travelled thousands of miles should taste more authentic.
i dont think many people on this board would have enjoyed the "authentic" IPA of old
its actually getting to the point where the term IPA simply means "hoppy" in craft beer culture, i dont know if thats a good or bad thing but the term IPA certainly doesnt mean the same thing now that is did back then
- markaberrant
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