Dave the Brewer
Well-Known Member
mr x said:That is a HUGE beer. You would need a big starter and definitely O2 aeration.
I also was thinking you would really need some O2 in the wort to allow the yeast to do their thing.
mr x said:That is a HUGE beer. You would need a big starter and definitely O2 aeration.
Benny Blanco said:Wouldn't adding a shot of vodka to a stout be a little easier?
Denny's Evil Concoctions said:Leave in Primary. Rouse the yeast cake. Maybe even pitch another starter of the high grav yeast and/or several packs of 1118 champagne yeast.
DO NOT move to secondary as that will remove it from the yeast cake.
It can take 6 weeks of primary on beers half that size to fully ferment out and usually requires multiple yeast rousings.
Also at this point you may want to raise the temp up a degree or two. Make sure you carboy isn't on a clod floor. That could cause stalling.
the_bird said:Unless you're kegging, you're going to be looking at this beer as being drunk flat (like a Utopias).
kaj030201 said:you bring up a good point- how does a beer like dogfish's 120 minute or worldwide stout get any carbonation at all? can you force carb in a keg then bottle?
landhoney said:You can force carb and bottle, but ideally the yeast are still alive/healthy enough to eat that final bit of sugar at bottling and carb it. If those(WWS&120) beers are bottle carbed, I believe so, the beer/yeast wasn't 'stuck'. The yeast fermented all the fermentable sugar and then were able to do the bottle carbing normally.
kaj030201 said:so pitching fresh yeast (like wlp099) at bottling would work the same way, right?
landhoney said:I can't say for sure, I think when the ABV gets up there it might be too 'shocking' for the yeast and it may or may not work. From my understanding though, adding them straight from the tube is almost assured not to work, maybe adding from a starter when the yeast are in consumption 'mode'.
Evan! said:Even then...I highly doubt it. HIGHLY. I wouldn't worry about trying to bottle carb a beer like this. Even my 15% Mephistopheles never really carbonated much. Once those babies poop out on you, it's extremely difficult to get them started back up. The other thing to realize is that with an FG that high, you're probably not just looking at all unfermentable sugar---you're also probably getting a proportion of it as fermentable sugar that the yeast is just too stressed to finish---as such, if you were to introduce more sugar for priming, and very healthy new yeast that have been chugging on a starter, you might actually get it to ferment some of those leftover fermentable sugars in addition to the priming sugar, and get gushers or bottle bombs. I just find that in these extreme conditions, it's very hard to regulate yeast activity. I guess you could "test" it by adding a very active 099 starter to the fermenter and get it relatively warm---if you don't see any activity, then bottle it with priming sugar. If you do see activity, wait until it trickles off before you bottle it.
Evan! said:irrational optimism that flies in the face of the facts is irresponsible and dangerous
So what'd you make that was 20%? I never heard about it. Where have I been?
I'm not so concerned about carbing though. My meph is aging like fine port, and I expect it to improve for a decade.
Denny's Evil Concoctions said:Why would he need the sugar?
Joe Dragon said:Couldnt he rouse the yeast a couple times by adding simple syrup of 1 pound corn sugar boiled and cooled with 2 cups of water? Pour it in the primary and give it a gentle stir. That will wake the yeast up and should drop the FG. If you still think there are fermentables in there Pasteur Champagne yeast should take those down.
Joe Dragon said:Im not sure what this response means. I was just relaying information I received from an accomplished brewer. Was this a productive response to something I said? Was I way out of line on something? Did you have something to add to the conversation other than thinking Im insane?
Bosh said:Damn that's a big beer *drools*
That might be as high as you're going to get, must be hard getting north of 70% attentuation on a beer that big.