The only disappointment was that it's very cloudy. Is this normal? will it clear within the next 8 weeks?
Anyway,if the smell is anything to go by, I guess Xmas will be a lot merrier than usual this year!

dont worry about the cloudyness, the majority of beers are cloudy when they are bottled/kegged, and they get clearer the longer you leave them.Mauri wrote:The only disappointment was that it's very cloudy. Is this normal?
Same thing happened to me. they've been out in the shed for 4 days and they are cloudy, while they were nice and clear when they were in the kitchen cupboard.PeteH wrote:On the subject of chill haze... I left my Grand Cru inside for 2 weeks after bottling, then moved to the garage. At this point they were already clear. A week later they are cloudy. Is this chill haze? and if so will it go if I let them warm up a bit before drinking?
Mauri wrote:Same thing happened to me. they've been out in the shed for 4 days and they are cloudy, while they were nice and clear when they were in the kitchen cupboard.PeteH wrote:On the subject of chill haze... I left my Grand Cru inside for 2 weeks after bottling, then moved to the garage. At this point they were already clear. A week later they are cloudy. Is this chill haze? and if so will it go if I let them warm up a bit before drinking?
Hi Rich, looks like another kit not reaching its advertised abv thenRichardG wrote:I did a Grand Cru for my Christmas beer; 1 kit, normal unprocessed cane sugar, followed normal instructions. OG was 1070 with a FG of 1014 giving me a 'health' ABV of 7.3%. Yippee!