Troubleshooting
Start from the symptom; we'll walk you to the likely cause, the process article that explains it, and the ingredient (if any) that's the usual suspect.
| Symptom | Severity | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Beer is sour, has a pellicle on the surface, gushes on opening, or shows visible mould | high | Bacterial or wild-yeast infection. Confirm with the symptoms above (not from a beer that tastes "off" in some other way), then assess whether the batch is recoverable. |
| Fermentation appears to have halted before reaching target final gravity | high | Gravity stops dropping above the expected FG. Confirm by reading three days apart; if unchanged for 72 hours, fermentation is genuinely stuck. |
| Beer tastes or smells like butter, butterscotch or movie-theatre popcorn | medium | Diacetyl is a fermentation byproduct produced by all yeast strains. Healthy fermentation reabsorbs it; truncated fermentation leaves it in the finished beer. |
| Beer tastes or smells like cooked corn, creamed corn or canned vegetables | medium | DMS (dimethyl sulphide) is produced by the thermal breakdown of S-methylmethionine during malting and brewing. Long, vigorous, lid-off boils drive it off; short or covered boils trap it. |
| Beer tastes or smells like green apple or fresh latex paint | low | Acetaldehyde is an intermediate in normal yeast metabolism. Healthy yeast reabsorbs it; bottling too early traps it in the beer. |