
brewinhard wrote:Let the carbonate in the bottles at typical ale temps (70's). When they are fully carbonated and conditioned properly, you can then move them to cold storage so they clean up even more nicely.


Juan De Fuca wrote:I brewed the BCS all grain Cal Common last year, and didn't mess with lagering, or extra conditioning time. Went straight from primary (2 weeks) to bottles, carb/conditioned for the usual 2 weeks at 70, as you did, and began drinking right away. I remember it being very good right off the bat. I don't remember whether the book suggests lagering this style, as it does for the altbier recipes.
I am far from an expert when it comes to lagering or conditioning, but what I've gleaned from reading, listening, etc. is that lagering in the bottle will allow the beer to crisp, clear, meld, and/or mellow, but it will not allow for the removal of some of the off flavors that need to be scrubbed out while in a vented container, and/or while sitting on yeast cake (depending on the off flavor). I read an Ashton Lewis article in BYO once that summed it pretty nicely. I don't remember which issue, or the exact subject of the article, but he was basically saying, what goes in the bottle, stays in the bottle.
I hope your issue clears up, this a great beer! Love northern brewer hops.

brewinhard wrote:Could it be that you are not used to the Northern Brewer hops? They can come across as "woodsy, earthy, and even minty" some might say. That combined with some sulfur production might be the cause of your off flavor or aroma.
Let the beers cold condition for a couple weeks and try another one (or three). That should give the beer some time to mellow out and allow the sulfur to dissipate.
If it comes across as a buttery flavor or aroma, that could be from diacetyl. This can be reduced by allowing your primary fermentation to rise to the high 60's F during the last 1/3 of fermentation allowing the yeast to clean up after itself (diacetyl rest). Not sure how necessary that would be for that yeast though.

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