BB Robust Porter in primary for 18 days. Time to bottle? | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

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BB Robust Porter in primary for 18 days. Time to bottle?

Discussion in 'Fermentation & Yeast' started by FantasticBastard, Jan 4, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    FantasticBastard

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    I have a Robust Porter that's been in primary for 18 days now and I've got the itch to do another batch but have no empty fermentors. I'd love to get this bottled and get something else in the carboy but I don't want to rush it.

    Unfortunately, I did not have a hydrometer on brew day so I do not know the OG. Does that mean that I should just err on the side of caution and let it sit for a few more days?
     
  2. #2
    hamiltont

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    You have a hydrometer now? If you do & you get the same reading 3 days in a row then it's most likely done. What yeast did you use and what is the temp? Cheers!!!
     
  3. #3
    FantasticBastard

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    Not sure about the yeast. It was whatever came with the kit (I'm at work right now and can't look it up). I know it was a Nottingham strand though. The temp has been between 65-69 (ambient temp) and the fermentor sits on a concrete floor in the closet of my loft. I also didn't have a wine thief (ordered today) so I wasn't really sure how to take samples.

    My rational brain is telling me to leave it alone and bottle 10 days from now, as planned, but the other side of my brain wants to brew again!

    Thanks for your response!
     
  4. #4
    hamiltont

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    It's in a bucket or carboy?
     
  5. #5
    FantasticBastard

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    5 gallon glass carboy. I guess what I'm really wondering is whether or not there will be a noticeable taste difference between 18 days in primary and 28 days in primary.
     
  6. #6
    beergolf

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    Get a hydrometer. With a kit you hit your OG. It is almost impossible to miss OG with extract unless your volumes were waaaaaaay off.

    Take a sample and if the gravity is stable for a few days bottle it up.

    My suggestion is to buy another fermenter or two. That makes it easier to let the brew sit. I did four brews before I tasted my first.

    With 3 or 4 fermenters. you can brew almost every week and still let each brew sit for 3-4 weeks.

    I have 4 that I use for my regular beers and two that I use for Belgians because they often sit for at least 6 weeks.
     
  7. #7
    NordeastBrewer77

    NBA Playa  

    Posted Jan 4, 2012
    i'll second the having stable gravity readings over a few days. i've brewed that kit before and found it got better with a little age, so bulk aging it in the fermenter for another couple weeks sure wouldn't hurt anything. it's a tasty porter, btw, you should be happy with the results.
     
  8. #8
    StophJS

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 5, 2012
    FantasticBastard, let me know how that turns out for ya if you would. I'd be curious to hear. I bottled mine today and there wasn't a roasted/chocolate note in sight.
     
  9. #9
    bullinachinashop

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 5, 2012
    @ 18 days, unless you were under 65 degrees, I'm sure your fine to bottle. I think that kit is a medium gravity kit.
     
  10. #10
    FantasticBastard

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 5, 2012
    Excellent! Thanks for the responses guys! Going to bottle tonight.
     
  11. #11
    StophJS

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 6, 2012
    Did you find that your porter tasted strange at bottling time?
     
  12. #12
    NordeastBrewer77

    NBA Playa  

    Posted Jan 6, 2012
    most beers don't taste quite right going into bottles, or at least, they taste very green, many of the expected flavors and aromas aren't there yet. generally, it takes 3+ weeks at room temp (70) to carb and condition a beer. a beer like this, or this beer in particular (i've brewed it a couple times) will take a bit longer to really come around to a nice porter. i found mine started getting really nice around 5-6 weeks and will continue to improve w/more time.
     
  13. #13
    jonmohno

    Banned

    Posted Jan 6, 2012
    Since you bottled already make shure you save some of those to drink over the next few months to compare how it tastes.
     
  14. #14
    NordeastBrewer77

    NBA Playa  

    Posted Jan 7, 2012
    you'll be happy if you do. i have a couple bottles left from the last time i brewed it, like june/july.... each one keeps getting better. it's actually a really nice li'l porter, IMO.:mug:
     
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