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Old 03-07-2011, 08:12 PM   #1
kcpup
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Default Any reason I shouldn't keg after 1 week if expected final gravity reached?

Hi -

Brewed a Southern Brown ale and pitched yeast on 2/27. Kept wort betweem 64-66 deg (cool side of optimum range - used Wyeast 1968 with an 1800ml starter from stirplate).

OG: 1.047 (expected was 1.042...got better efficiency than anticipated)
Current Gravity: 1.011 (expected was 1.012)

Hydrometer sample tastes good, no off smells/flavors. Very clear.

I could really use the fermenter for a APA I'm about to brew. Any reason to let it stay on the yeast longer?

I'm thinking rack to keg. Thanks for your thoughts...


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Old 03-07-2011, 08:21 PM   #2
bierhaus15
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Yep, that would be fine. As long as you had a healthy fermentation and there isn't too much diacetyl or off flavors, racking as early as day 6-7 is not a problem for most English yeasts (1968 especially). I would however, recommend giving the beer a quick crash cool before racking to flocc out any yeast left in suspension and set the malt profile.
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Old 03-07-2011, 08:24 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bierhaus15 View Post
Yep, that would be fine. As long as you had a healthy fermentation and there isn't too much diacetyl or off flavors, racking as early as day 6-7 is not a problem for most English yeasts (1968 especially). I would however, recommend giving the beer a quick crash cool before racking to flocc out any yeast left in suspension and set the malt profile.
Thanks Bierhaus15! I'll crash cool - good idea.
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