EdWort
Well-Known Member
Give me two weeks, and I will draw you the finest pint of ale that has ever passed your lips.
Yes you can BierMuncher, yes you can.
Give me two weeks, and I will draw you the finest pint of ale that has ever passed your lips.
I agree. I rarely leave beers in the primary for more than 14 days total.
Many people on this forum routinely do a 10-14 day time period in the fermenter. We just get sort of tired getting beat up on it and so don't say too much.
Many people on this forum routinely do a 10-14 day time period in the fermenter. We just get sort of tired getting beat up on it and so don't say too much.
The only time my ales age longer than 14 days is if I'm feeling lazy.![]()
I just did a really hoppy pale ale, 4 days in primary, then a week in secondary, bottled yesterday. I'm looking at my bottles and regreting the hell out of that call already. They've got double the amount of crap sitting in the bottom of the bottles that I normally have on a 3-4 week secondary.
Problem is, I tried 2 new things on one batch and don't know which might be the culprit. The fast bottling time, or this finiing stuff I got from my LHBS. IT's a packet containing keilosol (sp?) and Chitosan. Said add it, wait 24h and and bottle. Either way, got some seriously trub filled looking bottles of beer.
So that's why I'm not bottling in 10 days anymore.
Tim_Kreitz said:FWIW, I've found that my session beers don't seem to benefit much from three weeks on the trub. Usually about 10-14 days days does the trick and another seven isn't always an automatic, additional, perceivable benefit (depending upon style, of course.
Example: 1.045 cream ale brewed, thoroughly aerated and pitched with 750 ml starter of California ale yeast. Kept at 66 F
Active primary done in 4 days
Extended primary for 10 days total.
Not terribly clear but no krausen , bottled
Fully carbed in 10 days ( expect this due to ^ yeast insuspension). Dyacetal nose and mouth feel notably present.
2 days more bottle conditioning -'D note almost completely gone.
That was last night.... It is an exceptionally good ale IMO
It isn't that difficult for average ales.
Let the beer ferment to FG, how ever long that takes. (really shouldn't be more the 5 to 10 days)
Let it sit another day or two.
No diacetyl then cold crash, or add finings, if you want
Keg or bottle
The question is, would it have done better if I let it sit in primary for 3 weeks instead of 10 days? Who knows. Personally, I have no desire to determine for sure if a longer primary on such a small beer is necessary. My gut tells me, as others have said above, that session-strength beers probably do not need a very long time in primary IF conditions are perfect for the short time they are in primary.
I have bottled in 10 days with good results. If it works for you, carry on!
High gravity beers, on the other hand, do taste better after some conditioning.
Those of us reporting on the shorter time periods are basing our advice on a proper and planned pitching rate (in some cases you may intentionally under-pitch by a degree), proper aeration, and controlled fermentation temperature.
I think brewers need to be educated to to taste as they go and note when the beer stops changing for the better. Then it's time to bottle/keg.
Anything over 1.055 or so, however, does seem to benefit from employing the three-week technique
Pitch enough yeast, and ferment at the right temp, and the beer's not going to have to wait to clean the crap flavors up. It's also going to depend on how big of a beer you're fermenting, and what yeast strain is doing the work.
I'm pretty relaxed, and tend to package my beer when it's been finished for a few days AND it's clear...
I submit that the time in the fermenter is not at all one of the "top 5" of making the best beer. Instead, yeast health (proper pitching rate, proper fermentation temperature, good quality yeast), quality ingredients, good water, good sanitation, and good brewing techniques matter far more.
I feel that neither "short time frame" or "long time frame" is correct. It depends on the beer and the brewer. When the beer is ready and the brewer likes the results it is ready.
As a relative noob I think it is better if you make a topic like this a discussion rather than "You are stupid if you ferment longer than 10 days". Or, you are stupid if you don't ferment for a month" It does not help new brewers learn if topics like this one become a rant for one side or the other.
I keg most of my beer at 14 days and everything works out just fine for me. I believe the issue is certain highly vocal members of the forum are almost militant in the way they force their practices on others and view alternatives as poor technique. As a result they continue to regurgitate (read: copy and paste) their rants whenever anyone posts a question. This translates into the majority of the user base seeing these answers pop up time and time again and view it as being fact...
If you're going to bottle in 10 days, you need to just leave it in the primary the entire time and skip the secondary. Only 4 days is not long at all.
Not to be argumentative, but this is also incorrect. One very typical fermentation schedule is to dump yeast and trub (racking to "secondary" for us homebrewers) after 3/4 of the fermentables are consumed. This provides a cleaner environment for the suspended yeast to finish fermenting then condition the beer without contact on the dead cells and organic matter. This topic is beyond this thread, but I had to step in to say this is also not a scientific or universal brewing process. Again, you are not going to be in trouble leaving your beer on the trub for 4 weeks or so (I do it occasionally too, when I am busy, bored, or otherwise), there is just no real benefit in it 90% of the time for me.
Not to be argumentative, but this is also incorrect. One very typical fermentation schedule is to dump yeast and trub (racking to "secondary" for us homebrewers) after 3/4 of the fermentables are consumed.
I have not heard about this technique. Where can I read about it?
From what I have read, the most prevalent techniques have only about 1% of fermentable sugars present after primary fermentation and before moving to a conditioning tank. Not 25%.