expiry date
expiry date
I have a couple of tins of Cooper's Pilsner from about 5 years ago...I realize that the yeast would probably be dead but would the extract be any good anymore?....Just wondering what I should do with these 2 tins...Just chuck em out or are they still usuable...
thanks.
thanks.
The tins, like any other tinned food product, have a thin inner coating protecting them from the acid environment of the foodstuff. Does this become permeable and degrade with age? Why do they have an expiry date? Every tasted a tinned product that tastes "tinny"? Personally I wouldn't use them but the choice is yours. They should still be sanitary, but what of the taste they may impart to the brew.
Cheers, Ed
Cheers, Ed
So the bartender says to the horse "Why the long face?"
I bought a pile of out of date Toohey kits early last year. Some of the oldest had tiny spots of rust on the inside seams of the can. I used them all for dark styles & didn't notice any off tastes.
I wouldn't like to be making pale beers with subtle flavours with old cans. They are good for starters, just boil up a bit & keep the rest covered in the fridge or freezer.
I wouldn't like to be making pale beers with subtle flavours with old cans. They are good for starters, just boil up a bit & keep the rest covered in the fridge or freezer.
Ride, Drink, Repeat.
I agree with you Ed. The colour is not the only factor affected.Ed wrote:KEG, what I was trying to illustrate is if changes are noticed, then the malt is no longer the same as it once was intended to be.
Cheers, Ed
I also vaguely remember hearing that the low pH of the malt can leech the tin like flavours from the metal over extended periods?.
I'm not sure that the darkening has anything to do with the Maillard Reaction (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maillard_reaction). I could be wrong though.Sounds to me like the sugars are slowly breaking down over time. Perhaps a similar reaction as that that occurs when making dark red Belgian candy sugar, or how the malt darkens over the length of a boil...
Last edited by chris. on Thursday Oct 11, 2007 8:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Yup, and I got the same info from someone industry involved with canned products. Apparently the inside coating of the tin is a just a very thin acrylic, but I haven't actually confirmed this for myself. It's meant to protect the acidic foodstuff from reacting with the tin. This is apparently why you shouldn't buy dented tins because that protective layer might have been weakened.chris. wrote: I also vaguely remember hearing that the low pH of the malt can leech the tin like flavours from the metal over extended periods?.
Cheers, Ed
So the bartender says to the horse "Why the long face?"
Sigh. Glad to know my place in the world........
You can keep dried malt extracts indefinitely if sealed and stored in the dark and the colour wont/shouldnt change whereas you have said on this thread that the liquid stuff does. The difference between the 2 is therefore part of the reason for this. Whats the difference? The liquid extract still has some water in the tin. So the water present must accelerate the 'reaction' that is taking place.
Malt extract has a pH of approx 4 so over time this may cause some problems for lining inside the tin. Slighlty acidic solutions are more than capable of reacting with elemental tin but thats not what tin cans are made of.
Meeting to go to but will be back with more thoughts soon. Feel free to tear chunks out of these ramblings of a mad scientist.
Cheers
DrSmurto
You can keep dried malt extracts indefinitely if sealed and stored in the dark and the colour wont/shouldnt change whereas you have said on this thread that the liquid stuff does. The difference between the 2 is therefore part of the reason for this. Whats the difference? The liquid extract still has some water in the tin. So the water present must accelerate the 'reaction' that is taking place.
Malt extract has a pH of approx 4 so over time this may cause some problems for lining inside the tin. Slighlty acidic solutions are more than capable of reacting with elemental tin but thats not what tin cans are made of.
Meeting to go to but will be back with more thoughts soon. Feel free to tear chunks out of these ramblings of a mad scientist.
Cheers
DrSmurto
Thank you dr. That should put them back in their respective boxes.drsmurto wrote:Sigh. Glad to know my place in the world........
You can keep dried malt extracts indefinitely if sealed and stored in the dark and the colour wont/shouldnt change whereas you have said on this thread that the liquid stuff does. The difference between the 2 is therefore part of the reason for this. Whats the difference? The liquid extract still has some water in the tin. So the water present must accelerate the 'reaction' that is taking place.
Malt extract has a pH of approx 4 so over time this may cause some problems for lining inside the tin. Slighlty acidic solutions are more than capable of reacting with elemental tin but thats not what tin cans are made of.
Meeting to go to but will be back with more thoughts soon. Feel free to tear chunks out of these ramblings of a mad scientist.
Cheers
DrSmurto
