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fermentation temp control worries

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JLivermore

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Sep 2, 2012
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I tried not worrying and having a (unfortunately storebought) brew but I cannot seem to keep the water temp down.

This is possibly an exceptionally ghetto swamp cooler; it's a plastic storage bin, water comes up to about the level of the beer, there is about 1 inch space on 2 of the sides, 3-4 inches of space on the other two sides (rectangular bin; I can post a pic if it helps).

Also I just don't buy drinks so I didn't have any bottles and was kind of covering. I filled medium size (quart?) zip loc bags w/ water & froze them.

This will bring it down from 72 to around 65, but it's back up within a couple/few hours. (My place is always pretty warm; 4th/top floor and the AC runs pretty good to keep it at 75.) I'm churning out 3 bags morning, as soon as I get home from work, and again before bed; I'm going to up it 4 and that's as many as I can keep up with (or fit in really).

Are water bottles for some reason more effective than my ziploc bags? Should I go get some of those blue cooler packs?

Also I have never seen it bubble and I started fermentation over 24 hours ago. It is either really slow, or just not doing anything (yet?)

Any advice appreciated, for now or next time; I really enjoyed this first attempt and this forum and its kind users have been a huge help.

Hope I get some good beer out of it!
 
What yeast are you using, and do you know what its optimal fermentation temperature is? This really matters for both the potential sluggishness of the yeast. Also, did you use a yeast starter? If not, lag time may be even longer than you're noticing. I essentially use the same exact method, and the temperature vacillates between 65 and 70 degrees, but that's well within the range for the yeast I'm using, and I think the temperature actually inside the fermentor is probably even more stable than that, so it's no big deal.
 
I meant to include this is a red ale

I bought a kit from Brewer's Best. It doesn't say what kind of yeast it is on the instructions; I threw the actual empty packet out already.

(There was no yeast starter unless they had it mixed in somehow or something.)

Instructions say fermentation 64-72 degrees.

I read elsewhere on this forum the water should be 60-65 to have the inside be 68.

I guess I am not too worried at 72, but I also read it gets hotter as the fermentation gets going, so I'm concerned about my inability to keep it lower -- if it gets hotter I don't know what I'm going to do; also I know my place gets hotter while I'm gone during the day.
 
you're probably fine. being a noob myself the only input i can give is to age it for 6-8 weeks. too mellow out any off flavors from the warmer temps. my beer buddy does room temp all the time. his beer is alright. could use a little more aging, but he's an alchy LOL, err i mean homebrew lover


i got a freezer and a johnson controller for $80. set at 64F it kicks in maybe once an hour, and i only use it for two weeks per month. keep your eyes peeled for a deal if you have the space. the electricity on this is cheap
 
I just read the sticky about fermentation taking longer and no visible bubbles not being a problem, feeling better about that.

As for fermenting for 6-8 weeks, I have read here also letting it go longer can help cover errors.

Instructions talk about 4-6 days for bubbling to stop; no bubbles for 48 hours - done.

I was planning on waiting for bubbles to stop (however long that takes), the kegging.
 
as a general rule i don't touch my brew any earlier than two weeks. and then i cold crash for a week (which is a bit much probably). if i were more patient i'd go 2.5 weeks and 2-3 day cold crash
 
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