just tried beer in secondary fermantation and it is not bitter enough

  • Some of the links on this forum allow SMF, at no cost to you, to earn a small commission when you click through and make a purchase. Let me know if you have any questions about this.
SMF is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

jam030303

Newbie
Original poster
Jan 12, 2014
14
10
I know dry hopping will not add bitterness and I am thinking about boiling some hops in water and adding boiled hop water that is strained to my beer after it cools when I add priming sugar before bottling.  Has anyone ever tried this before, and if so how did it turn out.
 
1) What style is it? 

2) When you say not bitter enough, is it because there's too much residual sweetness or has it fermented all the way out and simply lacks bitterness?  How long was it in the primary/secondary?

3) Was it an extract batch you did using a partial boil?

4) Can you post the recipe and your process?  How much and what yeast did you use?  How did you aerate?

Note that carbonation will add carbonic acid which lowers the pH and brightens up a beer. 

A good example is to get 2 bottles of plain carbonated water (Talking Rain blue bottle from Costco is perfect for this)  and loosen the cap on 1 so it will de-gas. Keep them both in the fridge overnight, and taste them side-by-side to see the exact flavor differences that CO2 imparts into your beer.

The light bitter/sourness balances out some of the sweetness, and the co2 volatizes out some of the hop aromatics which your nose and tongue perceive as overall increased hop presence.

As far as making a hop tea and back-bittering, generally, trying to isomerize the hops at this point in a separate boil will result in too much of a grassy, vegetal flavor and detract from the beer.  Morebeer.com sells iso-alpha extract with is literally the bitterness compounds which you can add directly to your beer to rebalance after the fact in cases like yours.  Its not too expensive and I use it when I'm teaching BJCP beer judging classes.

Another option, If you have the fermenter space, and you are patient, is to brew another batch of the same style, make it over bittered, then blend the two together before you bottle/keg.  Doing that will also allow you to condition this beer longer.

hth
 
Yes, I've made "hop tea's" in the past and they work pretty good. You will still need to boil the water for 30-60 mins. to boil off the oxygen and extract the bitterness.

With Hop Tea I seperate the hops from the liquid using a French Coffee Press.

I've also had to blend a few brews over the past 20 years to get them more balanced. Like adding 1-2 pitchers of a hoppy brew to an underhopped keg.

Blending is done by everyone...including the big guys. Basically, you take an overly hopped brew and mix it with an underhopped brew. If you're lucky sometimes a 50/50 mixture improves both brews. If that is the case then you can just blend them both together for 2 batches of the same tasting brew.

I've even (purposely) made 3 batches of the same recipe and blended them for a homogenous flavor profile for all 3 kegs.
 
SmokingMeatForums.com is reader supported and as an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases.

Latest posts

Hot Threads

Clicky