bajaedition
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Who claims it clears faster?
most want it off the trub not to get off flavors
most want it off the trub not to get off flavors
Who claims it clears faster?
most want it off the trub not to get off flavors
The last thing that I think impacts perception is what I call the "Ugly Baby Syndrome". Some people have really ugly babies, but think they are the most beautiful babies in the world. The same is true sometimes with brewers- their beers are noticeably flawed but the UBS means that it tastes great to them, and they just don't "see" the oxidation or phenols in it. That's great in a way, as they have to drink their own beers, but it means plenty of bad beers in competitions! :cross:
Very funny and very true.
Who claims it clears faster?
most want it off the trub not to get off flavors
I think you are trying to be argumentative
OK you win
I do not argue with trolls
I think you are trying to be argumentative
have you read through some of my postHave you read this link?
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f163/secondary-not-john-palmer-jamil-zainasheff-weigh-176837/
I'm not saying that you need to accept this. But I suggest reading through the discussion as it may impart a different perspective.
I've seen a lot of posts on this board about using a secondary fermenter. There seems to be a whole bunch of very strong opinions in both directions, but mostly against. The prevailing arguments against using a secondary seem to be:
1. Increased risk of contamination
2. Risks of autolysis
3. Unneccessary work
wtfDean said:some folks secondary, and some folks don't
The OP:
"I have found that I have far less junk in the bottom of the bottle when I use a secondary between primary and bottling."
Why would you get off flavours from the trub at the homebrew scale and on typical brewing timelines?
What off flavours could possibly manifest at the homebrew scale in the first few weeks of sitting on the yeast/trub?
I'm not trying to be argumentative, I'm an open-minded guy. I'm just saying, "show me some evidence." So far, I haven't seen any evidence at all, just a bunch of conjecture and dogma.
I've never heard autolysis used as an argument AGAINST transferring to secondary. If anything, it's been used as an argument FOR getting the beer off the trub. Is that what you meant, perhaps?
I think racking to a secondary *can* produce clearer beer (or at least less sediment), under the circumstances employed by many homebrewers.
Why? Because in the process of carrying my fermenter from the basement to the kitchen, a fair bit of agitation occurs, and kicks up the sediment.
...
let that ferment 14 days tops, crash cool for 2 days and keg. .
I don't think of them as "off flavors" but I do pick up certain flavors from a long primary.
Basic Brewing Radio did an experiment where brewers all brewed the same recipe. One group did a traditional primary/secondary. One group did a primary only but not a lengthy one, and one group did a longer primary.
All beers were noted to be a bit different. The interesting thing is that it was about equally split among which were preferred!
For me, I don't love the flavor imparted by the yeast in a long primary. Others will routinely go 3-4 weeks in primary, and love those results.
I think everyone should do an experiment for themselves. Make an identical batch and do a three way test just as above. Your preferences may surprise you!
For me, it's not an autolysis flavor that I pick up that I dislike. (That's pretty distinct, like "hot dogs" to me). It's excess yeast character/flavor.
A couple days after fermentation is complete, I purge a keg with CO2, and then use CO2 to push the beer out of the carboy into the keg.
Just a short aside: Everything I've read said you should absolutely NOT use pressure to force liquid out of a glass carboy. They are not designed to withstand any kind of positive pressure whatsoever, and you risk exploding the carboy.
I do not push the beer out with the CO2 except at the very beginning. I have the carboy elevated and the keg below that. I just use a tiny bit of pressure to get a siphon flowing, and then I use just enough CO2 to fill in the headspace as the beer siphons out (it is barley on).
no pun intended I gather(it is barley on).
The only unintentional infection I've ever gotten was in primary. Never primary your beer!![]()