this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2023
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Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider
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I do not add any bitteringhops. I added at 15 m 5m 0m and then dryhopped.
What yeast are you using? Actually, would be helpful to just see the whole recipe.
Ok, some of this is in Swedish but you should understand the important stuff
American Pale Ale
Typ: Helmalt IBU : 40 (Tinseth) BU:GU : 0.74 Färg : 14 EBC Kolsyresättning : 2.4 CO2-vol Densitet innan kok : 1.048 Original Gravity : 1.054 Final Gravity : 1.011 30l Kastrull + lauterhelix Satsvolym : 20 L Kokvolym : 28 L Volym efter kok : 25 L Mäskvatten : 18.08 L Lakvatten : 17.49 L Lakvattentemperat.: 76 °C Satslakning : 1.05 L + 16.44 L Koktid : 60 min Total vattenvolym : 35.57 L Totalt utbyte: 60% Mäskutbyte: 72%
Extraktgivare (5.69 kg) 3.986 kg - Pale Malt 6.5 EBC (70%) 1.139 kg - Munich I 15 EBC (20%) 342 g - Carapils/Carafoam 3.9 EBC (6%) 228 g - Melanoidin 59 EBC (4%)
Humle (167.1 g) 30 min - 11.9 g - Columbus (Tomahawk) - 14% (... 15 min - 11.9 g - Centennial - 10% (6 IBU) 15 min - 11.9 g - Columbus (Tomahawk) - 14% (... 5 min - 11.9 g - Centennial - 10% (3 IBU) 5 min - 11.9 g - Citra - 12% (3 IBU) 5 min - 11.9 g - Columbus (Tomahawk) - 14% (4... 1 min - 11.9 g - Centennial - 10% (1 IBU) 1 min - 11.9 g - Citra - 12% (1 IBU) 1 min - 11.9 g - Columbus (Tomahawk) - 14% (1...
Torrhumle (dryhop) 3 dagar - 20 g - Centennial - 10% 3 dagar - 20 g - Citra - 12% 3 dagar - 20 g - Columbus (Tomahawk) - 14%
Övrigt Mäskning - 2 g - Calcium Chloride (CaCl2) Mäskning - 5 g - Gypsum (CaSO4) Mäskning - 2 ml - Lactic Acid 80% Lakning - 1.72 g - Calcium Chloride (CaCl2) Lakning - 4.29 g - Gypsum (CaSO4) 15 min - Kok - 0.5 g - Protafloc 15 min - Kok - 1 tsk - Yeast Nutrients
Jäst 2 pkt - Fermentis Safale American US-05
Mäskschema High fermentability 72.9 °C - Inmäskningstemp 67 °C - 60 min - Temperatur
So looking at the recipe (which I'm happy to say was far easier for me to understand given how little Swedish (read:none) I know), nothing in the grain bill or the yeast selection should affect clarity. Therefore I have to assume it is the "hop bursting" that is the cause of the haziness. It looks like you have 83.3g total (just under 3oz for any Americans reading) in the last 5 minutes of the boil, not to mention another further 60g (~2oz) as a dry hop. My guess is because the hops are added so late into the hot side, a large quantity of the hop oils is making it into the beer (note: this is certainly not a bad thing!), where they are binding to proteins in the wort to form what is known as colloidal haze. This is a fantastic scientific paper which goes extremely in depth into the properties of haze in beer and the causes of them.
My recommendations for you to help minimize the haze would be firstly:
Thank you for this reply! I have learned much from it