bullinachinashop said:Extract batch?
What yeast?
Calder said:What yeast, what temp, what OG, what ingredients, etc. Can't help without information.
bullinachinashop said:I make a Belgin Wit 6-8 times a year. I will typically use a Wlp400 vial for the first batch and then wash or re-use the yeast for all the additional batches.
I brew AG and my OG is +/- 1.048.
The recipe is basically 50% 2 row, 40% flaked wheat, 10% wheat malt.
The beer typically attenuates down to +/-1.008 in 10 days @ 65-68 degrees. Warmer if I want more esters.
So, that being said, it sounds like your yeast are being lazy and or are unhealthy.
At this point, I'd give the fermentor a good swirl every day for 2-3 days and warm it up a couple of degrees. They'll finish the job and the swirling of the fermentor will break up the floating krausen and let it settle out.
I love this style because I can go from grain to glass in under 2 weeks.
Bull
Won't shaking it up create off flavors?
I've always been worried about swirling fermented wort...
Calder said:Use a racking cane to gently rouse the yeast.
bullinachinashop said:You can actually pick up the fermentor and give it a big swirl for a couple of minutes. The gas in the head space is co2 so it won't cause any oxydation and then you don't have to open it up to outside contaminates. If you've already been messing with your beer numerous times, then as stated earlier, just stir gently for a couple of minutes with a sanitized spoon or racking cane.
BTW, just because you made a starter, doesn't mean you have healty yeast. Did you feed it and aerate it? What was the gravity of the starter wort? Did you aerate you wort before pitching?
The reason I question the health of the yeast is because when I use the Belgin Wit yeast, after 10 days I could float a dime on the 1.5-2 inches of dense Krausen. I either swirl and let it flock out or if I have time, I just forget about it for a few more weeks.
Good luck
Bull
3944 wyeast, 72 ferment all grain 1.050
Ya I made a starter of 1.038, did intermittent shaking every chance I got. Cold crashed it after two days and decanted the wort and pitched the slurry
jlaureanti said:You cold crashed a starter??? Why would anyone do that? IMO, the goal of a starter is, one - to take a small amount of yeast and amplify them to a higher quantity and two - to introduce that now higher quantity of yeast in an active state and not a dormant state. When you crash cool, you kill some of your yeasties and you put them into a dormant state. Even when you warm them back up they are just awake not active. Which might describe the slow fermentation? Do you crash cool them often?
jlaureanti said:and that works fine to increase the number of yeast cells in solution, but if you would like to increase fermentation rate, it is better to add yeast that has already started fermentation and is still fermenting when you pitch. There are four main stages in a yeast life cycle, lag, log, stationary and death. By adding yeast that has completed fermentation you have already went through the four stages and are restarting the process all over again. Which adds more time to your fermentation. If you add in yeast that is actively fermenting (wort in starter and all) to your fresh wort ready to ferment you are starting in the second stage (a healthy active stage)...
So what you are doing is fine and if it works for you thats awesome... But just so you know my last 3 fermentations have taken less than 6 days to reach my F.G.
You cold crashed a starter??? Why would anyone do that? IMO, the goal of a starter is, one - to take a small amount of yeast and amplify them to a higher quantity and two - to introduce that now higher quantity of yeast in an active state and not a dormant state. When you crash cool, you kill some of your yeasties and you put them into a dormant state. Even when you warm them back up they are just awake not active. Which might describe the slow fermentation? Do you crash cool them often?