ersheff
Well-Known Member
Hello.
Just joined the forum. What a great resource!
My brewing partner and I just checked the gravity on our most recent (third) beer today. It was a slightly modified version of Papazian's Dubbel Your Pleasure.
We added some pumpkin at the advice of another experienced home brewer and just a touch of cinnamon at the end of the boil. I know that might sound sacrilegious, but it was the only way I could convince the brewing partner to brew something with pumpkin. I had it in my head to make some sort of pumpkin beer because I've always been disappointed by commercial versions.
Anyway, the wort smelled FANTASTIC when it came off the boil. Since I'm still new to brewing, I've often just used the "potential alcohol" reading on the side of the hydrometer instead of the true gravity reading because, at this point, I'm mainly just using it as a way to gauge when fermentation has finished. We started at about 7.5-8% "potential alcohol".
Shook the pail to aerate. Pitched Wyeast 1388 Belgian Strong. Might have pitched a little hot as I forgot to check the temp of the wort when we pitched, but we followed the same cooling/topping off process we always have, and the pail was not hot to the touch, so I'm thinking we were at 80-85. Smack pack popped but barely swelled (if at all) over a few hours. Nevertheless, airlock was bubbling within 24-36 hours. Sitting in basement that's fluctuating between 65-68.
Checked on the beer today after 2 weeks. "Potential alcohol" reading was down to 1%. Very low krausen residue on the sides of the pail compared to our last 2 beers, but no signs of infection. Belgian smell was INSANE. I finally get what's going on with Belgian yeasts. Those fruity, banana-y, bubble gummy smells were just hitting us in the face. I was actually a little worried that pitching/temp errors on our part might have encouraged too many undesirable flavors, but a smell of the beer that dripped off the hydrometer once we'd walked away revealed the pumpkin and cinnamon and malt, and much less of the bubble gum and banana, so I think we might be OK.
I rocked the bucket a few times to make sure the yeast are up and about and will check again in a couple days. I'm hoping that the last bit gets fermented as I'd prefer a little drier finish.
I'm posting mostly because it's just fun to talk about beer, but also because I'm wondering about how this will finish up. Will it benefit much more from sitting on the yeast cake after little bit of potential alcohol finishes up? Will sitting on the yeast cake help clean up any undesirable or overpowering flavors, or might that happen in the bottle as well? (we kind of want to bottle as soon as possible so we can have a porter ready by the time my girlfriend comes back from Ireland in mid-December as that's her favorite) Are Belgian yeasts know to have less active and longer fermentations? (this was certainly the case as compared to our first 2 brews with non-Belgian yeasts)
I'm sure a lot of this information is available by searching, but there's SO MUCH information and SO MANY different opinions, that sometimes it's nice to just go ahead and ask.
Thanks to everyone for the awesome forum!!!
Just joined the forum. What a great resource!
My brewing partner and I just checked the gravity on our most recent (third) beer today. It was a slightly modified version of Papazian's Dubbel Your Pleasure.
We added some pumpkin at the advice of another experienced home brewer and just a touch of cinnamon at the end of the boil. I know that might sound sacrilegious, but it was the only way I could convince the brewing partner to brew something with pumpkin. I had it in my head to make some sort of pumpkin beer because I've always been disappointed by commercial versions.
Anyway, the wort smelled FANTASTIC when it came off the boil. Since I'm still new to brewing, I've often just used the "potential alcohol" reading on the side of the hydrometer instead of the true gravity reading because, at this point, I'm mainly just using it as a way to gauge when fermentation has finished. We started at about 7.5-8% "potential alcohol".
Shook the pail to aerate. Pitched Wyeast 1388 Belgian Strong. Might have pitched a little hot as I forgot to check the temp of the wort when we pitched, but we followed the same cooling/topping off process we always have, and the pail was not hot to the touch, so I'm thinking we were at 80-85. Smack pack popped but barely swelled (if at all) over a few hours. Nevertheless, airlock was bubbling within 24-36 hours. Sitting in basement that's fluctuating between 65-68.
Checked on the beer today after 2 weeks. "Potential alcohol" reading was down to 1%. Very low krausen residue on the sides of the pail compared to our last 2 beers, but no signs of infection. Belgian smell was INSANE. I finally get what's going on with Belgian yeasts. Those fruity, banana-y, bubble gummy smells were just hitting us in the face. I was actually a little worried that pitching/temp errors on our part might have encouraged too many undesirable flavors, but a smell of the beer that dripped off the hydrometer once we'd walked away revealed the pumpkin and cinnamon and malt, and much less of the bubble gum and banana, so I think we might be OK.
I rocked the bucket a few times to make sure the yeast are up and about and will check again in a couple days. I'm hoping that the last bit gets fermented as I'd prefer a little drier finish.
I'm posting mostly because it's just fun to talk about beer, but also because I'm wondering about how this will finish up. Will it benefit much more from sitting on the yeast cake after little bit of potential alcohol finishes up? Will sitting on the yeast cake help clean up any undesirable or overpowering flavors, or might that happen in the bottle as well? (we kind of want to bottle as soon as possible so we can have a porter ready by the time my girlfriend comes back from Ireland in mid-December as that's her favorite) Are Belgian yeasts know to have less active and longer fermentations? (this was certainly the case as compared to our first 2 brews with non-Belgian yeasts)
I'm sure a lot of this information is available by searching, but there's SO MUCH information and SO MANY different opinions, that sometimes it's nice to just go ahead and ask.
Thanks to everyone for the awesome forum!!!