BeerFYI

Fermentation Science

Identifying Off-Flavors

3 min read Обновлено Мар 03, 2026

Recognizing Problems

Every brewer encounters off-flavors at some point. Learning to identify them — and understanding their causes — is essential for improving your beer. Most off-flavors have specific causes and specific solutions.

Diacetyl

Flavor: Butter, butterscotch, movie-theater popcorn.

Cause: Normal yeast metabolite produced during fermentation. Becomes a flaw when yeast does not reabsorb it — usually due to premature packaging, under-pitching, or crashing the temperature too early.

Fix: Perform a {{glossary:diacetyl}} rest: raise the temperature 3-5 F near the end of fermentation and hold for 2-3 days. Ensure adequate pitch rate. Do not cold crash until fermentation is truly complete.

Acetaldehyde

Flavor: Green apple, raw pumpkin, fresh-cut grass.

Cause: An intermediate compound in the fermentation pathway. Present in all fermenting beer but should be converted to ethanol by healthy yeast. Premature packaging or under-pitching prevents cleanup.

Fix: Allow fermentation to complete fully (confirm stable FG over 2-3 days). Ensure adequate pitch rate and temperature.

DMS (Dimethyl Sulfide)

Flavor: Cooked corn, creamed corn, canned vegetables.

Cause: Produced from SMM (S-methylmethionine) in malt, especially Pilsner malt. Driven off during a vigorous boil but re-forms as wort cools slowly.

Fix: Maintain a vigorous, uncovered rolling boil for at least 60 minutes (90 for Pilsner malt). Cool wort rapidly after the boil. Do not cover the kettle during the boil.

Fusel Alcohols

Flavor: Solvent, rubbing alcohol, hot/harsh warming sensation.

Cause: High fermentation temperatures, under-pitching, poor aeration. Yeast produces excessive higher alcohols when stressed or when fermentation runs too hot.

Fix: Control fermentation temperature (stay within the yeast's recommended range, especially during the first 48 hours). Pitch an adequate quantity of healthy yeast. Oxygenate wort properly.

Oxidation

Flavor: Cardboard, paper, wet newspaper, sherry-like (in aged beers).

Cause: Exposure to oxygen after fermentation. Every transfer, splash, and poorly sealed container introduces oxygen. Oxidation is cumulative and irreversible.

Fix: Minimize oxygen exposure during transfers, dry hopping, and packaging. Purge containers with CO2. Use closed transfers when possible. Package promptly.

Astringency

Flavor: Harsh, puckering, tannic — like over-steeped tea.

Cause: Tannin extraction from grain husks due to high sparge water temperature (above 170 F), high sparge water pH (above 5.8), or over-sparging (collecting wort below 1.010 gravity).

Fix: Monitor sparge water temperature and pH. Stop collecting wort when gravity drops below 1.010. Do not squeeze the grain bag.

Phenolic Off-Flavors

Flavor: Medicinal, band-aid, chlorine-like, plastic.

Cause: Chlorophenols from chlorinated water reacting with phenolic compounds. Also possible from wild yeast contamination.

Fix: Treat all brewing water to remove chlorine and chloramine (Campden tablets). Ensure impeccable sanitation.

Sourness / Infection

Flavor: Sour, vinegary, acidic (unintended).

Cause: Bacterial contamination (Lactobacillus, Pediococcus, Acetobacter). Usually from inadequate sanitation or contaminated equipment.

Fix: Review and improve sanitation practices. Replace scratched plastic equipment. Deep-clean all tubing and valves.

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