ciscosd2000
New Member
What temp are your ferment at for this beer?tagz said:I'd be concerned less about the dryhop and more with the fact that it's only at 1.020 after ten days. Most healthy ferments reach FG after 3-5 days.
What temp are your ferment at for this beer?tagz said:I'd be concerned less about the dryhop and more with the fact that it's only at 1.020 after ten days. Most healthy ferments reach FG after 3-5 days.
eval said:Thanks! Makes senseI had my Two Hearted Ale a couple of hours north of Grand Rapids, MI this summer so I guess they were fresh. I think I will go with 1.5 - 2 oz for the dry hop on this first batch.
What temp are your ferment at for this beer?
I live in ohio and can and do get this beer fresh pretty much year round (except beat _ichihan week). I would start at 2oz dry hops personally. Also, I do my bittering with some cascade hops to get a citrus characteristic similar to the bells house yeast. It's not the same, but close if you aren't harvesting the yeast from a bottle.
eval said:What FG are you other people using 1272 yeast getting? Brewed on Dec 1 with an OG of 1.068. Mashed at 150F. Pitched a decanted 1.5 litre (about the same in quarts) starter and fermented at 64-65F during the first week. Raised the temperature to 68F after seven days. Took a gravity sample yesterday (at day 11) and it was down to 1.014. My guess is that its finished.
You can try edging the temp to just over 70, or accept it as a good FG. I'd probably just leave it alone personally.
So I did a side by side blind taste test on my version of this recipe and the real thing. Both were bottled within 2 weeks of each other (late Oct/early Nov). Both my girlfriend and I said they were pretty much indistinguishable in taste. Mine was actually clearer, but it could have been due my pour. We both don't love the 100% centennial hops, but both said it was the best IPA I've made and I attribute that to the mineral additions I made. I added 8 g gypsum to this batch (ended up with ~200 ppm sulfate). It was the first time I've added minerals to my beer. I didn't make it without the minerals to truly know if it was the gypsum, but we both thought the hops "popped" more and were "brighter" than my other hoppy beers I've made. Thanks for the recipe!
I brewed a batch of this Saturday, definitely my most uneventful brew day to date!
The only issue I ran into was when I went to pitch my starter of yeast collected from a real Two Hearted, it smelled pretty funky, very phenol-y. I have had issues with collected yeast before, so I decided to play it safe and pitched a 1056 American Ale I had instead. Hopefully it still turns out well!
I harvested some two hearted yeast also that smelled very phenol-y. So I toss the yeast cause it was brown and from an old bottle. I reharvested again from a bottle that was a few weeks old and it still smells phenol-y. This ones nice and white and creamy. So I'm going to pitch it and see what happens.
I've had this happen too with harvested Bells yeast. I pitched it even though it had a phenol-y smell and my batch never came around. I chalked it up to an infection somewhere while I was harvesting. That was my first and only batch I hat to dump.
I've since given up trying to harvest yeast and just use 1272 which still makes for a great IPA...![]()
They don't specifically mention Two Hearted (probably because of the higher alcohol content making it not as good of choice as their lower alcohol beers for harvesting). But at least they gives me hope that what I have is their house primary fermentation yeast and not a bottling yeast.since we don’t filter any of our ales either, you can harvest it directly from the bottle.
Thanks for the info. Your making me wonder if I should not use my harvested yeast. I tasted the wort from the starter and it didn't taste bad. I've got a nice amount of yeast built up. I stepped it up from one bottle 3x. What happened with your batch when you said it didn't come around.