Posted January 6, 2021 in Brewing

What is BioHaze�
Itās a natural process aid derived from gum acacia and tannic acid that creates a shelf-stable hazy, turbid appearance. Tannic acid reacts with proteins in the beverage matrix to create the haze, and gum acacia stabilizes it ā without it, tannic acid products alone will eventually cause the haze to precipitate.
Why would a brewer use BioHaze�
BioHaze⢠can help packaged beer maintain haze for up to 6 months; small-scale trials will allow brewers to fine-tune the exact appearance of their product. BioHaze⢠also fosters improved mouthfeel and enhanced foam stability ā also desirable attributes for hazy beer styles.



Moreover, BioHaze⢠can be used in a standard recipe ā no need to reformulate the grist or alter brewhouse process to add a new hazy beer to your portfolio. Turn a clear lager into a kellerbier, or a standard pale ale or west coast IPA into a juicy, hazy version.
How do you use BioHaze⢠in the brewhouse?
BioHaze⢠is best added post-filtration (or at the end of the cold-side process if not filtering). Pre-filtration additions will cause the tannin-protein complex to be removed; since cold conditioning removes proteins that are more likely to sediment out, adding BioHaze⢠prior to cold conditioning is also not recommended.
Other factors affecting BioHaze⢠performance are:
For more info:
BioHaze⢠Info Sheet from Kerry
āHaze for Days in Your IPAsā ā RahrBSG Webinar with Jonathan Doyle and Eoin Lalor from Kerry