When to rack primary to secondary?

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HomerT

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Well, as this is my first brew, I have a question. I made the wort and pitched the yeast around noon on monday. Tuesday was a furious bubble. Wednesday was a slow bubble. This monring, I checked and saw no bubbling in ~1min, so it has slowed significantly. Here is the dilema:

Tomorrow I leave for the weekend for a wedding. SHould I rack to the secondary tonight, since bubbling has slowed? Or do I wait until Sunday night when I return?

-Todd
 
Actually, anytime after the krausen has setteled to the bottom. I've got a batch in the primary right now that won't be ready in 1 week. I started at 1.073 OG last Saturday and She's still got 4" of krausen on top right now with millions of yeast working below.
 
If you have a hydrometer that's a good way to test. The bubbling method also works. You shouldn't ever rack the beer to secondary until the krausen has fallen. Basically, I'd say right now is fine as long as there's no krausen (foamy yeast cake) on the surface. In the past I typically racked as soon as the bubbling slowed.. I've never relied on my hydrometer. However, today I went home for the weekend and elected to leave the beer in the primary for what will be a full 8 days rather than rack it before I left after only 4.5 days. I think it's personal choice.. you'll be fine either way.
 
I elected to leave it. However, how do you check the Krausen in a plastic primary? Plry back the lid to check?

-Todd
 
Well, last night I got home and racked it to the secondary. Everyting went fine, except I left a little in the primary because I couldn't get the autosiphon to keep pulling without getting "down in muck". I figured I would rather lose a little in the name of clarity. Everything is in the carboy secondary (with about 6 inches of air-space before at the top. I got a little fermentation again, as the airlock was bubbling about once a minute this morning. Specific gravity matched the final for the recipe, so things are moving smoothly.

On a side note, the autosiphon was a tricky tool. It took several pumps to get it going correctly. That will take a while to get used to.

-Todd
 
You're right to leave a little behind rather than suck up some of that trub. It's always better to sacrifice a little quantity to improve your brews quality.
 
Hey SuperBrew,

Is that a real quote from Benjamin Franklin (your signature)? I saw that on a tee-shirt at the local microbrew/pub. Almost bought it too. The only difference - it didn't say Ben Franklin.

Back to the topic at hand. You should be able to keep your brew in the primary for a good two weeks, and a month at the max. I usually don't, but I was forced to when the Philipino Doctor sliced me open and pulled out what looked like a sick gopher. After surgery I was pretty puny for a while :( , so I let it sit in the primary for a good month. That beer was still the best one to date. I hope to top it soon though.
 
gibfried said:
Hey SuperBrew,

Is that a real quote from Benjamin Franklin (your signature)? I saw that on a tee-shirt at the local microbrew/pub. Almost bought it too. The only difference - it didn't say Ben Franklin.

Back to the topic at hand. You should be able to keep your brew in the primary for a good two weeks, and a month at the max. I usually don't, but I was forced to when the Philipino Doctor sliced me open and pulled out what looked like a sick gopher. After surgery I was pretty puny for a while :( , so I let it sit in the primary for a good month. That beer was still the best one to date. I hope to top it soon though.
Regarding the quote, it is attributed to him (http://www.quotedb.com/quotes/986), although I'm unsure as to the source.

Good to hear things are going smoothly for your, Todd :)
 
Give your primary a gentle tilt when racking as you get towards the bottom. You'll get more brew out. Sucking in a little slurry isn't going to harm anything...
 
desertBrew said:
Give your primary a gentle tilt when racking as you get towards the bottom. You'll get more brew out. Sucking in a little slurry isn't going to harm anything...

I thought of the tilting part this morning. It would help alot, as the end of the auto-spihon seems a bit bulkier than a normal racking cane.

-Todd
 
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