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Astringency can be any number of things from excess tannins from over sparging, to a lactic bug in your brewing environment.
If the beer is brewing out dry then some people perceive this as astringent.
It might be the malt. It can harbour moulds and such that although they're killed during the boil, they produce chemical by products that survive and impart astringent flavours.
Are you using freshly crushed malt? Rancid or stale malts cause astringent flavours.
Are you filtering out the chlorine from your brewing water?
Are you separating out the protein breaks from your brew?
Are you racking the beer off the yeast soon enough after fermentation? Autolysis is perceived as astringency by some people.
Maybe it's the yeast itself.
Ow good thread, I've been having trouble with weird tasting astringent pale ales recently... Also a kind of yucky malty flavour I thought was from the crystal I've been using, but I don't think it is... This is good food for thought.
I've been thinking maybe it's to do with:
maybe my fermentor buckets are a bit old/tired?
mashing too thick - strike temp being too high?
something weird with pH - I do water additions but can't monitor pH?
problems re-using yeast?
Probably getting more than one problem mixed up as one though!
It's spring in NZ so all the wild yeasts are out and about looking for a new home...
I'd switch to glass from plastic. It makes a huge difference. You can sanitize with bleach and the finished product is so much better tasting.
Re-using yeast can cause some funky flavours depending on how many generations you let the strain develop for.
I read somewhere that you can get away with about 3 in a home environment but I personally never risked the time, effort, and money that goes into a brew with my own strain.
Do you filter the water?
A permaculturist I was listening to recently put it very nicely and he said something like this:
What do they put chlorine in water for? To kill bugs right? So Chlorine kills living things.
And so what happens when you water your garden with city water? The Chlorine kills off millions of microbes in the soil that are essential for the correct biodynamic balance needed to grow vegetable properly. The dead microbes then spew toxins as they decompose and the soil gets even more out of whack...
The same goes for beer. As we're all well aware, beer is a complex interaction of enzymes, yeasts, microbes and all sorts of living things.
For beer making choline isn't always a bad thing. Although in high levels it can lead to 'off' flavours, the tap water levels in NZ are pretty low. For example Palmerston North tap water has lower chlorine levels than the ground water in most of Germany.
I'm not saying that Chlorine isn't the problem, but if lots of Wellingtonians are brewing perfectly fine beer with tap water, I'd be looking somewhere else first.
I had some astringency issues a little while back and after a lot of research and experimentation I put it down to the Sulphate : Chloride ratio.
I was adding CaS04 to my beers without adding any Chloride to balance it and ended up with astringent beers (albeit only slightly). Brewing salt calculators like this will show you a Sulphate : Chloride ratio and if it says highly bitter then it will likely be astringent.
My beers are no longer astringent :)
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