I swear I've looked for this but still perplexed. Needless to say, I'm very green. Now, I've read a number of places that 70% of the alcohol is made in the first 3-5 days.
So... first there's the aerobic fermentation, (also called primary?) where we mix it up to get the O2 in so the yeast can reproduce, taking 3-5 days. Check. Then, after using up the O2, they go into anaerobic (secondary?) whereas one of the byproducts is alcohol. Check.
But how can it produce most of the alcohol in the first 3-5 days if it must be deprived of O2 to produce alcohol, and we're busy splashing it around adding O2? And why after 3-5 days do we suddenly stop adding O2 and rack to secondary?
Any replies are greatly appreciated. (Especially using small words. And pictures.)
So... first there's the aerobic fermentation, (also called primary?) where we mix it up to get the O2 in so the yeast can reproduce, taking 3-5 days. Check. Then, after using up the O2, they go into anaerobic (secondary?) whereas one of the byproducts is alcohol. Check.
But how can it produce most of the alcohol in the first 3-5 days if it must be deprived of O2 to produce alcohol, and we're busy splashing it around adding O2? And why after 3-5 days do we suddenly stop adding O2 and rack to secondary?
Any replies are greatly appreciated. (Especially using small words. And pictures.)