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corobre

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What a cool site.

I'm a novice homebrewer with a Belgian witbier in the primary that after 50+ hours I thought was not fermenting as expected. I just spent some time reading the sticky thread on fermentation times and now regret both my degree of personal agitation and the open bucket wort agitation I performed earlier this evening! I had no idea that some brews didn't produce noticeable airlock action, yet I had every reason to believe that the conditions were sound. By proclaiming my fervent intent to henceforth rely on the hydrometer before rushing to declare yeast impairment I hope the fermentation fairy sees fit to cut me some slack this time.

On my relatively new blog (creation coincident with a long-delayed decision to begin homebrewing) I keep track of some of my brewing, coffee roasting, and other kitchen experiences. Perhaps eventually I'll have something to contribute here!

Steve

cooking, roasting, brewing
 
Yeast are fairly hardy little beasts. It sounds as though maybe your lid has some leakage therefore the airlock is not showing activity. Consider getting a Better Bottle in the future and you won't have to remove the lid plus watching the fermentation is quite spell binding for a short time. :)

Welcome to the forums .....beermaking is great fun.
 
Thanks, Bill. OG was 1.052. I have not taken another reading up until this point because I didn't believe anything was happening. The sticky fermentation thread was very helpful in that regard. Last night it finally did produce external evidence (and I was glad I'd fitted a blowoff tube rather than an airlock; it was necessary even with 6+ inches of head space) and I'll probably take a reading today.
 
Thanks, Bill. OG was 1.052. I have not taken another reading up until this point because I didn't believe anything was happening. The sticky fermentation thread was very helpful in that regard. Last night it finally did produce external evidence (and I was glad I'd fitted a blowoff tube rather than an airlock; it was necessary even with 6+ inches of head space) and I'll probably take a reading today.
Let it ferment for a good week and then take your gravity reading. No need to take one when the brew is actively fermenting.
 
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