CBMbrewer
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- Nov 30, 2011
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I have been brewing for almost two years now and have come across, as many of us have, many different ways to conduct a brew from grain to pint.
Here are the main options I have seen. (this is for ales with dry-hopping, temps per style)
A: 7 days in primary. Siphon into secondary and dry hop. Condition for 14 days. Bottle/Keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
B: Leave in primary until fermentation slows (3-7 days). Siphon into secondary and dry hop. Condition until target gravity is reached and/or the beer is 14 days old [or let the beer age on the hops for 14 days]. Bottle/Keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
C: Leave in primary. After fermentation slows (3-7 days) dry hop directly into the primary. Condition in primary until target gravity is reached and/or the beer is 14 days old. Bottle/keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
I have always used option A, but this takes 5 weeks to go from grain to pint. I also have to deal with siphoning the beer into a secondary carboy and risk some oxidation.
So, will all of these methods work fine? Are different methods going to produce a difference in the beer? Will leaving the beer in primary for the duration of all of the fermentation give the beer a more yeasty taste? Is there a best option or should I just pick one to have the beer ready to drink at a given time?
Thanks for all feedback.
Here are the main options I have seen. (this is for ales with dry-hopping, temps per style)
A: 7 days in primary. Siphon into secondary and dry hop. Condition for 14 days. Bottle/Keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
B: Leave in primary until fermentation slows (3-7 days). Siphon into secondary and dry hop. Condition until target gravity is reached and/or the beer is 14 days old [or let the beer age on the hops for 14 days]. Bottle/Keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
C: Leave in primary. After fermentation slows (3-7 days) dry hop directly into the primary. Condition in primary until target gravity is reached and/or the beer is 14 days old. Bottle/keg (prime) ready to drink in 10 days to 2 weeks.
I have always used option A, but this takes 5 weeks to go from grain to pint. I also have to deal with siphoning the beer into a secondary carboy and risk some oxidation.
So, will all of these methods work fine? Are different methods going to produce a difference in the beer? Will leaving the beer in primary for the duration of all of the fermentation give the beer a more yeasty taste? Is there a best option or should I just pick one to have the beer ready to drink at a given time?
Thanks for all feedback.