I got a few of my beers tested for Brulosophy and turns out I was undershooting IBUs by about a third. This was true for both simple lager hop bills and IPAs with massive WP additions. I now set my BrewFather IBU utilization factor to 70% and target the actual IBU of the style (eg: if I want “45” I build my recipe to hit 45, given 70% utilization setting). I believe my beers are much better as a result now. I think the firmer bitterness supports them better - especially lagers (which I believe my prior ones -before my testing / software recalibration- were underbittered).
I will note that I stretch my IBUs out across the boil on my higher IBU beers (eg: maybe equal IBUs from 60, 20/10, and 0 min additions) and won’t do more than 20-30 IBUs from my 60 min bittering addition.
I really suggest adjusting your utilization assumptions and brew to the number you would want for the style - you might find your bitterness balance is improved.
There was a lot of stuff (yeast, polyphenols, ...) in suspension in this beer. It took several doses of clarifiers, and 2 months, for it to drop clear.
There was a second batch from the same wort that used a different yeast. It fermented faster and dropped clear right away. It did not seem as sweet.
I was thinking that it was mainly the different ester profiles from the two yeasts that lead to the difference in perceived sweetness. But what you describe could be an important factor as well. oh yeah, that makes sense No wait I think Mark’s bar is Goomba
Thanks.