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Who brews big beers?

Discussion in 'Fermentation & Yeast' started by vesestilldrumming, Jan 23, 2013.

 

  1. #1
    vesestilldrumming

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2013
    Scottish wee heavy has been in primary for ten days and still has insane airlock activity and rich krausen. OG was 1.083 and used edinburgh ale yeast by WLP as a starter. When should this slow down? Kind of weirded out by such long fermentation.
    image-2356323038.jpg
     
  2. #2
    badlee

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2013
    I can't help you,but that is a blody great picture!
     
  3. #3
    beergolf

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2013
    1.083 will be done when it is done.

    It can take a while so just let the yeast do what they do best. They do not punch a time clock.
     
    daksin likes this.
  4. #4
    pdxal

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Jan 23, 2013
    Patience. Guess what? Big beers take longer. Small beers take longer than 10 days.
    Give it at least 3 weeks before getting worried. Take gravity measurements over 3 days apart to tell if it is done fermenting.
     
  5. #5
    diS

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2013
    Forget it for at least 4 weeks and then decide to bottle or not.
    I have 10gal of strong scotch ale (1.074) brewed almost month ago, I'll leave it min 1-2 week more before bottling.

    Theoretically, you could bottle it after fermentation is done but condition for bigger beers would take much longer than for standard OG beers.
     
  6. #6
    chuckstout

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2013
    Yeah like most said 2-3 weeks of fermentation then 1-2 weeks of clean up and clarity. You could probably speed it up by raising the temp slowly maybe a degree a day. At lower temps it well take longer. If your fermenting that yeast in the 50s it will take much longer probably 3-6 weeks im guessing.
     
  7. #7
    etrain666

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2013
    This is a good idea if you have the capability. Not to rush the yeast, but to ensure they are able to completely attenuate the beer and you dont get stuck a few points higher than you should have.
     
  8. #8
    jflongo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2013
    I agree with the above. Yeast strains vary, by type, age, etc. Once you see the airlock slow down and only see bubbles every minute or two, then check it again. Who knows, this could happen tomorrow, or 2 weeks from now :)

    It's hard to be patient, we all suffer from that.
     
  9. #9
    vesestilldrumming

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2013
    Two weeks now and still ridiculous activity. Bubble every 6 seconds and krausen is still like Booyah!! I my face!! Haha but im definitely being patient, just monitoring.
     
  10. #10
    aiptasia

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2013
    Just chill and wait. My wee heavy usually goes a full two weeks of initial fermentation on Windsor yeast and I let it sit in the primary a full month. Windsor isn't quite as aggressive as the strain you appear to be using and it has problems floccing out (cold crashing is a must), but it makes for a very delicious malty wee heavy. Especially when you add 1 oz. of whiskey soaked oak chips to it during the final week.
     
  11. #11
    beergolf

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2013

    Each fermentation is different. Some can finish fast and others just chug along for a long time.

    I had a BDSA that looked like a lava lamp in the carboy for a full three weeks.
     
  12. #12
    daveb123

    Active Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2013
    I always rouse and swirl my fermenters vigorously during the initial primary fermentation....that lovely big yeasty krausen is doing nothing in the way of fermentation!...stir all that yeast back into suspension and i guarantee you would half your fermentation times!

    You cant rush yeast by stirring the krausen back into suspension...but you will speed up the fermentation process by having MORE yeasts in suspension in the wort where its needed!....

    I only brew big beers 8-12% Abv and i never wait much longer than 2-3 wks to fully complete primary fermentation in a 10% Abv beer..

    My latest brew an imperial IPA of 1.100 OG is already fermenting like crazy...i swirl the fermenter vigorously to re-introduce all the yeast in the krausen back into the wort!...i do this 3-5 times a day for 3-5 days.....all that yeast is doing no good sat on the top!.....
     
  13. #13
    vesestilldrumming

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 26, 2013
    Just swirled my bucket to reintroduce the krausen and yeasties. Thanks for ur knowledge. At least your words.
     
  14. #14
    vesestilldrumming

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 27, 2013
    Wow! I got a whole new fermentation after I swirled to beer. Holy cow that helped alot! My airlock is going nuts right now.
     
  15. #15
    jlsummers75

    Member

    Posted Jan 27, 2013
    Just brewed an Imperial IPA with rye on the 21st. OG 1090. I pitched WLP090 and it took off. Took a reading today after the noticeably active fermentation stopped. 1019. Still see yeast moving around. I think another week and it'll be done. Sample tasted awesome btw. Might enter this into the nhc. No swirling or nothing. Shook up Carboy good prior to pitch used a 2l starter and within 3 hours it kicked off! Just let it sit at 69.
     
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