Maturing

General homebrew discussion, tips and help on kit and malt extract brewing, and talk about equipment. Queries on sourcing supplies and equipment should go in The Store.
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Hillbilly

Maturing

Post by Hillbilly »

I see that everybody has there own view about maturing. I find that fruit, wheat and pilsner beers are at there best 4 to 12 weeks old and that lagers, bitters and dark beers after 12 weeks old. I'm interested in what you think.
Hillbilly

Post by Hillbilly »

Whoops, did'nt think it went through the first time sorry foks.
Dogger Dan
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Joined: Thursday Aug 26, 2004 10:43 am
Location: Lucan, Ontario, Canada

Post by Dogger Dan »

I was reading an article and they say it is ultimately up to you. I think 5 minutes is enough some days.

Normally min is two weeks optimum 4-6 weeks

Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
db
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Joined: Friday Oct 15, 2004 2:29 pm
Location: sydney

Post by db »

i find ales, providing fermentation is nice & clean (right temp, good sanitization etc), & the recipe is spot on, are best young - 4weeks is usually long enough.. lagers i cannot comment on yet.
thehipone
Posts: 266
Joined: Tuesday Sep 21, 2004 12:20 pm
Location: Brisbane, QLD

Post by thehipone »

Generally, the more bitter and higher in alcohol the beer, the longer it needs to mature. Barleywines and double IPA's aren't at their best until a year or more sometimes. English ales can be ready as soon as they are carbonated a dn can actually decline in flavor with longer aging.
Oliver
Administrator
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Joined: Thursday Jul 22, 2004 1:22 am
Location: West Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Post by Oliver »

I drank a 7-year-old homebrew imperial stout with my cousin at the weekend and it was superb. In fact, it's better than some previous bottles, so may be coming to its peak!

It's my No.19 at http://www.homebrewandbeer.com/ourhomebrews.html if you want to have a look at the ludicrous recipe (7kg liquid malt and 1.5kg of grain in 23 litres!).

Cheers,

Oliver
Evo
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Joined: Thursday Oct 21, 2004 1:04 pm
Location: Sydney
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Post by Evo »

Yeah, that is my opinion too. Lighter beers are better after a short amount of time, heavier beers better after a longer time. I do find that with wheat beer, fresh is best. I'm not sure whether I just get sick of drinking wheat beer or whether the flavour declines with time.
Evo - Part Man, Part Ale
Hillbilly

Post by Hillbilly »

Thanks guys, looks like were on the same track.
Cheers,
Hillbilly
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