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Beer colour affected by water chemistry and/or yeast?

I've just re-brewed a best bitter that I brewed a couple of months ago. The malt bill was virtually identical (just the addition of 100g of home-toasted Victory this time). However, the yeast is different this time (Wyeast 1275 Thames Valley as opposed to 1469 West Yorkshire) and I tweaked my water chemistry .

The beer this time is much paler. Last time was a chestnut sort of colour, this time it's a mid-amber. Could either the yeast or the water chemistry have had such a big impact on the colour?

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Did you compare your home-toasted to the commercial variety for colour?
There was none in the first recipe - it was a pure addition to the second recipe.
That's weird, as long as the base malts had not changed (between batches etc)? That is their colour has minor changes between batches.
What did you add to the water?
You did add a heap of salts and minerals, surely that has to affect the colour some how? I wouldnt suspect that its the yeast...
I think water chemistry can affect the color, but what the mechanism is I am not sure.

I would think mash temperature and especially sparge temp could have an impact as well, I would assume higher temps would extract more color.

Aerating above 20C can make the wort darker as well.

But to make such a dramatic difference sounds weird!
Was the boil less vigorous this time? Could be less kettle caramelisation.
Both will change colour.

I believe it's the level of calcium, more calcium = less melanoidin colouring reactions.

Yeast will also affect it as well, like a less flocculant yeast will appear slightly paler because of the pale coloured cells in suspension, IIRC they may also affect colour in some other more 'chemical' type ways.

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