Your likely a more advanced brewer than I am, so I respect what you're saying even though your kind or warning me here. Why don't you count a lot more Mississippi's next time while injecting oxygen and see if it ruins your batch.
At the least, your claim that one cannot inject to much oxygen into a batch is slightly muted by the fact your limiting your own oxy injections to such short time periods.
I'm just using filtered air so it doesn't concern me at this point but I suspect there's more to the story than "it can't be done".
Quick question, what are ill effects of aerating after you pitch your yeast?
It's what I usually do, and it sounds like it's the incorrect thing to do...
I have a centennial pale ale that I've made at least 30 times. It's kinda my "house brew". I'm not sure it's even a pale ale with an og of 70, but whatever. Lol! I have always aerated it with my o2 tank. I made the mistake of using the bathroom after starting the aeration process. Next thing I know, my wife is calling me for something dumb, kids start fighting upstairs, something gets spilled on the couch... etc etc etc. Lol!
Anyways, I forgot and left the o2 on the whole time. Almost 30 minutes in a 5 gallon batch. End result...
Everything was the same. Lag time, amount of days fermenting, flavor, appearance. Nothing was different. I thought it was gonna be ruined. I was dead wrong.
To be fair, I've made the same batch and didn't aerate at all. Everything was still the same, except it took about 12 hours more before it became active.
I'm starting to question the validity of oxygenating for 5g batches. Shaking may not even be necessary. I may just start "splash pouring"...
I've had a bit of a difference with oxygenating wort. Two batches of the same beer. Ferment was the same, same times, same yeast, same temps, etc.
Batch one with O2: Grain to carbonated keg, 14 days. Nice clean ferment, beer's good.
Batch two, No O2: Grain to carbonated keg, 14 days. Ferment looked good, beer has acetaldehyde/green apples. Not a lot, but noticeable.
Seems that properly oxygenated worts ferment and finish out faster.
I have a centennial pale ale that I've made at least 30 times. It's kinda my "house brew". I'm not sure it's even a pale ale with an og of 70, but whatever. Lol! I have always aerated it with my o2 tank. I made the mistake of using the bathroom after starting the aeration process. Next thing I know, my wife is calling me for something dumb, kids start fighting upstairs, something gets spilled on the couch... etc etc etc. Lol!
Anyways, I forgot and left the o2 on the whole time. Almost 30 minutes in a 5 gallon batch. End result...
Everything was the same. Lag time, amount of days fermenting, flavor, appearance. Nothing was different. I thought it was gonna be ruined. I was dead wrong.
To be fair, I've made the same batch and didn't aerate at all. Everything was still the same, except it took about 12 hours more before it became active.
I'm starting to question the validity of oxygenating for 5g batches. Shaking may not even be necessary. I may just start "splash pouring"...
Seems that properly oxygenated worts ferment and finish out faster.
None, some beers (higher gravity) I am told benefit from a 2nd shot of O2 a day or two later.Quick question, what are ill effects of aerating after you pitch your yeast?
It's what I usually do, and it sounds like it's the incorrect thing to do...
...Anyways, I forgot and left the o2 on the whole time. Almost 30 minutes in a 5 gallon batch. End result...
Everything was the same. Lag time, amount of days fermenting, flavor, appearance. Nothing was different. I thought it was gonna be ruined. I was dead wrong.
To be fair, I've made the same batch and didn't aerate at all. Everything was still the same, except it took about 12 hours more before it became active.
I'm starting to question the validity of oxygenating for 5g batches. Shaking may not even be necessary. I may just start "splash pouring"...
When I'm draining the chilled wort from the kettle into the bucket fermenter, I whip the tubing back and forth in a zig-zag pattern so that the wort gets splashed around as it enters the bucket. At the same time, I have the tip of my left foot underneath the edge of the bucket, which allows me to "rock" the bucket back and forth. By pacing the "rocking" motion just right, you get some pretty violent sloshing with very little effort. I find this so much easier than putting the lid on the filled bucket and attempting to shake it; I did that once and swore to never again.
I've had a bit of a difference with oxygenating wort. Two batches of the same beer. Ferment was the same, same times, same yeast, same temps, etc.
Batch one with O2: Grain to carbonated keg, 14 days. Nice clean ferment, beer's good.
Batch two, No O2: Grain to carbonated keg, 14 days. Ferment looked good, beer has acetaldehyde/green apples. Not a lot, but noticeable.
Seems that properly oxygenated worts ferment and finish out faster.
Quick question, what are ill effects of aerating after you pitch your yeast?
It's what I usually do, and it sounds like it's the incorrect thing to do...
I poured the wort into the carboy hoping that it would be enough to aerate the wort,
View attachment 333477
Was I right? How will I know if I'm wrong? And is it possible to aerate it 24 hours after pitching.
So I've known how important aeration of wort is prior to pitching yeast... my solution was always to throw open the valve on my kettle and watch the stream of wort flow through the air and make impact on the side of my fermentation bucket... as the stream gets smaller, I just scoot the bucket.
I do this inside so there's very little risk of crap falling in, and I keep my wife and kids away. By the time I'm finished there's a ton of froth in the bucket, I pitch my yeast and usually there's activity within 24 hours (within only a couple if I do a good starter).
Besides the obvious infection risk (which, knock on wood, I've not had a single one in all the times I've done this), any other potential down sides?