T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
997.1 | | KAOA09::KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Tue Apr 25 1995 10:50 | 5 |
997.2 | | CMEM3::GOODWIN | Paul Goodwin (dtn)223-6581 | Tue Apr 25 1995 10:56 | 7 |
997.3 | | TNPUBS::DIORIO | Myopic Visionaries | Tue Apr 25 1995 11:02 | 5 |
997.4 | | KAOA09::KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Tue Apr 25 1995 11:35 | 11 |
997.5 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Tue Apr 25 1995 12:44 | 18 |
997.6 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Apr 25 1995 13:48 | 9 |
997.7 | Might not be the water.... | ASDG::JOHNSON | | Tue May 09 1995 16:40 | 8 |
997.8 | | CMEM3::GOODWIN | Paul Goodwin (dtn)223-6581 | Wed May 10 1995 10:33 | 2 |
997.9 | We meet again... 8-) | DIVER1::MACHADO | We are free ONLY if we conform | Tue May 16 1995 12:18 | 8 |
997.10 | Hpoefully not a problem yet | GRANPA::JKINNEY | | Fri Jan 24 1997 09:59 | 14 |
| I've just brewed my first batch.Everything so far is going
well.Fermentation in the primary was very active.I am making
an India Pale ale.Ingredients included toasted barley,7 lbs of
amber dried malt extract,hops for bittering and flavor.I've just
transferred from the primary to secondary glass carboy w/airlock.
The brew at this point appears very,very cloudy.I've read that
irish moss can be used for clarity and this is usually added during
the last minutes of the boil.My question is that since i did not
add irish moss during the boil because the recioe i was using did
not mention it,can i now boil a small amount of water and add the
irish moss then transfer this to the brew in the secondary?
Any suggesions appreciated , thanks from a new brewer in Delaware.
|
997.11 | I love the smell of seaweed in the morning! | DECWET::KOWALSKI | Time's not for saving | Fri Jan 24 1997 11:18 | 24 |
| Irish moss needs to be in the boil because its "particles"
are relatively heavy and need the turbulence of the boil
to keep them from settling out. If you add them to the
secondary, they'll just drop to the bottom real fast and
not have much affect.
But fear not! There are many other vile substances you
can add to the secondary or during bottling to aid
in clarification:
1. Plastics (polyclar or its ilk). Usually added during
racking but you can just add some to the top of the
brew in the secondary (will foam up though).
2. Horse's hooves (gelatin, jello, etc). Added at
bottling (to the pail you rack the 2ndary into just
before you bottle).
3. Fish guts (isinglas in polite society, which this
isn't). Added at bottling, as for 2.
Hope this helps!
Mark
|
997.12 | "time" | ZEKE::SMITH | | Fri Jan 24 1997 13:01 | 7 |
|
Or: if any of those ingredients don't seem too tasty....
You could give it "time" and it will clear natrually... :^)
George
|
997.13 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Fri Jan 24 1997 14:15 | 10 |
| re .10
How long did you leave it in the primary before transferring? It will
probably clear by itself, but if it doesn't you can move it to a colder
location for a few days after fermentation is done.
If it doesn't clear, I'd advise you to let it clear in the bottle or
drink cloudy beer.
Jamie
|
997.14 | Shoulda relaxed! | GRANPA::JKINNEY | | Mon Jan 27 1997 09:01 | 5 |
| re: -1
4 days in primary.It is currently in my basement on it's 5th day in the
secondary.Tempature in the basement is about 55 degrees.It does appear
to be clearing.I will update all after the taste test.
Thanks,Delaware Joe
|
997.15 | waiting to relax | GRANPA::JKINNEY | | Fri Jan 31 1997 13:29 | 12 |
| First,thanks for the advice given so far.The brew is clearing
nicely.When I checked on it last night (9th day in the secondary),
i noticed the airlock burp twice about 5 minutes apart.Just the two
hiccups.Did not notice anymore activity afterwards.Is this normal for
fermentation to be continuing this long? And how long should it remain
in the secondary normally? I'm getting conflicting stories such as
"when all activity has stopped","four days""3-4 weeks".Or should i
siphon some out for hydrometer test although i'm not sure of FG level
of this recipe.I'll also be bottling in 2 liter bottles with screw caps
that I got from a Pharmicutical company.This is the same type of bottle
used by our local microbrewery for brews to go.Any thoughts on using
this type of container for bottling (head space,explosions?)
|
997.16 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Feb 03 1997 10:05 | 8 |
| 3-4 weeks should be enough for almost any brew...my rule of thumb
( I use thumbs instead of a hydrometer) is 7-10 days..4-5 in the
primary and *if* we transfer, 4-5 more days in the secondary.
Otherwise, 7-10 days in the primary..bottle, 2-3 weeks in bottles
before i taste. Of course that's when we brew/bottle regularly...we
now have 10 gallons that has been in primaries for 3 weeks....%^)
but will bottle that tonite.
deadhead
|
997.17 | | LJSRV2::JC | Where's the snow? | Mon Feb 03 1997 10:19 | 6 |
| Delaware Joe,
I'd go ahead and bottle it.
Let it hang in the bottle for 2 weeks, then drink.
i rarely ferment my ales/stouts more than 7 days before it
is kegged.
|
997.18 | | REDZIN::COX | | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:00 | 39 |
| re 2ndary fermentation...
My personal, empherical observations of "time in fermentation" are that the
variables are Yeast (type, freshness), Sugars (% of Malts, Honey, etc),
fermentation temperature, and my patience. In general, the more sugar content
and/or the older the yeast, a longer net fermentation seems to be best.
I have brewed a sufficient number of batches of exactly the same recipes
(lager, steam, ale) that I have been able to isolate the effects of 2ndary
fermentation (within each recipe) and develop a "rule of thumb" that seems to
work for other recipes of similar style.
Within the following:
* I usually brew around 8-10 lbs sugars for 5 gallons; Extract Syrup,
DME, Honey. (If I wanted light beer, I'd buy Bud.)
* I always use liquid yeasts.
* I always ferment in the basement where it stays around 60F for most
of the year, up to 65F in the late summer.
I have developed the following rule of thumb:
For a lager yeast, 2 weeks in the primary, 6 weeks in the 2ndary.
For an ale yeast, 3 weeks fermentation, no 2ndary.
After bottling, I usually get a drinkable brew after 2 weeks. Normally, flavor
(and head) improves markedly over the next 2-4 weeks while retaining
"freshness".
What that works out to for my rate of consumption is that I bottle one batch
while I brew another.
FWIW,
Dave
|
997.19 | Looks like bottling time! | GRANPA::JKINNEY | | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:18 | 9 |
| We're bottlin' tonite!!
All this advice and experiences have been most helpful.
Thanks, Delaware Joe
*Also, if anyone visits this Mid-Atlantic area and needs a brewpub
crawl tour guide ...or a sample..look me up Joe Kinney @DWO
Thanks, Delaware Joe
|
997.20 | Bottling time? | DLO04::MAKI | | Tue Feb 04 1997 16:16 | 8 |
| Joe
You could try this if you like on the next batch. I put a
sanitized hydrometer in each secondary, I have about four that I use.
Then I wait till the gravity is stable over about 3 to 4 days (Ales),
this will save you lost beer from each read if you had used the
standard reading technique. I usually tilt the carboy so the hydrometer
will not hit the bottom of the carboy and crack the glass hydrometer.
Good luck, Eric
|
997.21 | It's only 'lost' if if goes down the drain | VESPER::VESPER | OpenGL Alpha Geek | Wed Feb 05 1997 10:56 | 14 |
| > You could try this if you like on the next batch. I put a
> sanitized hydrometer in each secondary, I have about four that I use.
> Then I wait till the gravity is stable over about 3 to 4 days (Ales),
> this will save you lost beer from each read if you had used the
> standard reading technique.
This is a good technique if you don't have anything floating on top of
your beer to interfere with reading the hydrometer.
However, even when I use the 'standard' technique of pulling beer from the
carboy into a tester, I never have 'lost' beer -- I drink it and record
the taste in my brewers notebook.
Andy V
|
997.22 | Me too (almost. Woof!) | DECWET::KOWALSKI | Time's not for saving | Wed Feb 05 1997 11:40 | 6 |
| >>However, even when I use the 'standard' technique of pulling beer from the
>>carboy into a tester, I never have 'lost' beer -- I drink it and record
>>the taste in my brewers notebook.
I give my dogs their monthly dose of vitamin B. They love it!
|
997.23 | almost there,almost there,almost there | GRANPA::JKINNEY | | Fri Feb 07 1997 12:02 | 8 |
| Beer Bottled,now in waiting phase..back to the brew pub in the mean
time.I taste tested it during bottling and was quite surprise,not bad
but i believe the 7lbs of amber malt will make it quite the kicker.I
have recently purchased a long (10") glass turkey baster sort of device
in order to collect samples from the secondary for testing in the
future.Again this conference is an invaluable tool for us newbies!
Thanks, Delaware Joe
|