Allenjoseph5
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- Joined
- Apr 11, 2016
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Hi,
I'm relatively new to brewing. This is my 7th batch overall, and my first all grain. This was also my first time using a yeast starter. (WLP300)
Yesterday I put a Hefeweizen (O.G. 1.066) in my 6 gallon bucket primary fermenter. When I woke up this morning, the airlock was filled with foam and there was also foam coming out from under the lid. I don't have a blow off tube, but will be getting one tomorrow for future brews. I cleaned the airlock and filled it with star San and water again. When I got home from work today, there were zero bubbles coming through the airlock.
I have a few questions. I've never had such a crazy rapid fermentation. Is it typical for fermentation to slow to a dead stop after such an event?
Also, I really wasn't thinking that I would have such an active fermentation for a few reasons. The first being that it wasn't a super high O.G. beer. I was under the impression that blow off tubes were usually only need on high abv beers. The second reason was that there was plenty of head space. Less than 4 gallons made it into the fermenter.
Should I have skipped the yeast starter and just pitched the liquid yeast by itself?
Final question: is there any negative effects to having this type of fermentation happen?
Thanks in advance for any help.
I'm relatively new to brewing. This is my 7th batch overall, and my first all grain. This was also my first time using a yeast starter. (WLP300)
Yesterday I put a Hefeweizen (O.G. 1.066) in my 6 gallon bucket primary fermenter. When I woke up this morning, the airlock was filled with foam and there was also foam coming out from under the lid. I don't have a blow off tube, but will be getting one tomorrow for future brews. I cleaned the airlock and filled it with star San and water again. When I got home from work today, there were zero bubbles coming through the airlock.
I have a few questions. I've never had such a crazy rapid fermentation. Is it typical for fermentation to slow to a dead stop after such an event?
Also, I really wasn't thinking that I would have such an active fermentation for a few reasons. The first being that it wasn't a super high O.G. beer. I was under the impression that blow off tubes were usually only need on high abv beers. The second reason was that there was plenty of head space. Less than 4 gallons made it into the fermenter.
Should I have skipped the yeast starter and just pitched the liquid yeast by itself?
Final question: is there any negative effects to having this type of fermentation happen?
Thanks in advance for any help.
