I brewed an English mild last week using Wyeast 1968 and put it into my fermentation chamber in the garage. Everything started off fine, then the temperatures here in Texas dropped like a rock and my freezer fermentation temp dropped to 52 while I was out of town on business. I've since moved the carboys (10 gallon batch) into the house where temps are around 70. I plan to let it warm up over the next day and swirl the carboys to see if the yeast kicks back in. My question is regarding oxidation. When I moved the carboys I had to remove the blowoff tubes from the jug I use to catch blowoff. Am I ok to really swirl the beer vigorously to get the yeast back into suspension? I'm worried I let some oxygen in when I broke the liquid seal on the blowoff tubes and pulled the carboy cap off to test gravity. Am I being too paranoid or should I figure out a way to purge the headspace with my CO2 manifold or just go ahead and pitch more yeast?
The target FG is 1.007 and I measured 1.020 today. I started at 1.032, so I've got a way to go.
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The target FG is 1.007 and I measured 1.020 today. I started at 1.032, so I've got a way to go.
Sent from my iPad using Home Brew