Hi All,
A bit of background:
Having played around with kits in my youth I've returned to brewing and have just brewed my first all grain batches: Jim Line's London Pride Clone. I decided to work on the same recipe for the first few brews to hopefully make it easier for me to refine my technique and learn what's going on while keeping a lot of variables constant. I've scaled the recipe down to 1 gallon as follows:
700g Marris otter
50g crystal
50g demerara sugar
6g fuggles 12g Golding's at start of boil
3g Goldings at end of boil to steep for 15minutes
2g Golding's dry hopped for seven days, added after seven days of fermenting
Safale s04 yeast
Mash for 1:30 in cooler, strike at 70c
Boil 1:30
The first batch was bottled last weekend. I don't think I sparged for long enough and ended up with an OG of 1.032. This fermented down to 1.004 by the time I added the dry hops at day seven. The gravity didn't change for the next seven days before I primed and bottled giving me an FG of 1.004
The second batch was brewed a week later and I used a longer sparge and more sparge water. This gave me an OG of 1.042 which sounded more promising ( the recipe suggested 1.040). After a week in the fermenter I took a gravity reading when I added the dry hops. It was 1.010. I checked again two days later and it hasn't changed.
This has raised a few questions and I was wondering if anyone could help me out as I don't really understand exaclty what is going on.
1. Is 1.010 too high to bottle if it remains at this point for the rest of the week? The chart here: http://homebrewmanual.com/beer-gravity-chart/ would suggest that it's actually about right for an English bitter and I wouldn't have worried, but my hydrometer packaging says in bold writing not to bottle above 1.006 or 'bottles will burst!'. It even has a black line at 1.006 to make the point.
2. Why do yeasts stop fermenting? I thought it was because they ran out of fermentable sugar or because their environment was too alcoholic. If the environment is too alcoholic, why do they start fermenting again when priming sugar is introduced? If they have run out of sugar, how can two batches with the same recipe run out of sugar at different points?
These are probably stupid questions and I'm missing something obvious but I can't get my head around it.
Thanks
A bit of background:
Having played around with kits in my youth I've returned to brewing and have just brewed my first all grain batches: Jim Line's London Pride Clone. I decided to work on the same recipe for the first few brews to hopefully make it easier for me to refine my technique and learn what's going on while keeping a lot of variables constant. I've scaled the recipe down to 1 gallon as follows:
700g Marris otter
50g crystal
50g demerara sugar
6g fuggles 12g Golding's at start of boil
3g Goldings at end of boil to steep for 15minutes
2g Golding's dry hopped for seven days, added after seven days of fermenting
Safale s04 yeast
Mash for 1:30 in cooler, strike at 70c
Boil 1:30
The first batch was bottled last weekend. I don't think I sparged for long enough and ended up with an OG of 1.032. This fermented down to 1.004 by the time I added the dry hops at day seven. The gravity didn't change for the next seven days before I primed and bottled giving me an FG of 1.004
The second batch was brewed a week later and I used a longer sparge and more sparge water. This gave me an OG of 1.042 which sounded more promising ( the recipe suggested 1.040). After a week in the fermenter I took a gravity reading when I added the dry hops. It was 1.010. I checked again two days later and it hasn't changed.
This has raised a few questions and I was wondering if anyone could help me out as I don't really understand exaclty what is going on.
1. Is 1.010 too high to bottle if it remains at this point for the rest of the week? The chart here: http://homebrewmanual.com/beer-gravity-chart/ would suggest that it's actually about right for an English bitter and I wouldn't have worried, but my hydrometer packaging says in bold writing not to bottle above 1.006 or 'bottles will burst!'. It even has a black line at 1.006 to make the point.
2. Why do yeasts stop fermenting? I thought it was because they ran out of fermentable sugar or because their environment was too alcoholic. If the environment is too alcoholic, why do they start fermenting again when priming sugar is introduced? If they have run out of sugar, how can two batches with the same recipe run out of sugar at different points?
These are probably stupid questions and I'm missing something obvious but I can't get my head around it.
Thanks