Wed Aug 22, 2012 4:02 am
Sulfide appears is beer as jungbuket (bouquet of youth) which in in the popular translation of DeClerck is rendered as 'beer stench'. The sulfide can come from two sources: sulfur containing amino acids (cysteine, methionine) and from sulfate in the water. As you don't have much control over the amino acid makeup of your malt/wheat that leaves the water. Low sulfate water is desirable for wheat beers in terms of what it does to hops but I suppose it would be desirable from the jungbuket point of view as well. But jungbuket isn't really a problem as it will fade in time. You can hasten this a bit by overcarbonating and then letting the overcarbonation bleed off. The CO2 leaving the beer will 'scrub out' some of the volatiles. You didn't say whether you were asking about sulfidic or sulfitic aromas. CO2 scrubbing and/or tincture of time will work in either case.