Why do some beers smell skunky?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Light reacts with hop compounds
Light reacts with hop compounds ✓ — Correct! 'Skunked' beer is light-damaged, not old. UV and blue light react with hop compounds (helped by riboflavin, a vitamin in beer) to form MBT, a molecule almost identical to skunk spray. Brown glass blocks that light; clear and green bottles don't, and cans or kegs are safest.
The beer has gone old and stale — Wrong. Skunking is about light, not age. A fresh beer left in sunlight can skunk in minutes, while one kept in the dark stays fine far longer.
Bad water was used to brew it — Wrong. It's not the water. The skunky smell is a light-triggered reaction with hop compounds, not a brewing-water problem.
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