kellynm
Well-Known Member
I just pitched my yeast yesterday in my first batch in 10 years... she's a bubblin' away as we speak... current temp... 65 F.... fyi
Four days? Go on vacation and drink beer without worrying. Your beer will be happy you left it alone. Go on vacation for several weeks. Your beer will wait for you. It might even be happy that you left it alone.I was going to start a thread asking about fermentation signs, and low-and-behold the first thing I read supplied my answer. Just like my first batch a few months ago, this batch is slow to produce fermentation bubbles. It's been about 48 hours so far. The only problem is I leave for a short vacation Wednesday morning. I've been told I can simply put the fermenting bucket in a refrigerator to stop the action, and take it out and resume fermenting when I get home in four days. Wutchya think?
It has been 18 hours since I pitched my yeast and no airlock activity (I know this is not necessarily a sign that there is no fermentation). I opened the lid and found a good amount of krausen indicating some fermentation. Any reason why there is no airlock activity? I checked the lid and it seemed to be tight. It is not the same lid that came with the bucket but it seems tight enough.
Still too early to worry much and I believe things are good due to the fact that there is krausen on top of the wort. Is my thinking correct?
At 54-57* any yeast will be slow to start.
But...
If that yeast is intended for Ale temps it may not like the low temps at all. You might want to pick up a colder temp Lager yeast.
I have to ask what the vodka is for.