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Fixing Low OG

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Sjt_71

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Yesterday, I brewed my first BIAB brew which was intended to be an IPA. It went smoothly until it was time to pitch the yeast and I took an OG sample. I expected it to be around 1.056 OG but it only came out around 1.042. That is a surprising difference and I believe I know what the cause is.
I pitched the yeast and this morning everything is fine, that is if you like brewing 3.2 IPA's!

My question is this, can I boil say 2lbs of DME or honey and add it to the fermenter after fermentation has begun to boost the OG a little bit? Definitely not conventional but it seems like it would work as long as one added it during vigorous yeast activity.

Thanks!
 
Sounds like an interesting experiment for sure. I don't think you'll ever know the true adjusted OG, but I don't think that matters too much.
 
You could add the boiled and cooled DME before active fermentation or during the first hours of active fermentation. Adding during these times would not risk oxidation.
I would use the DME. Sugar/honey is 100% fermentable. This would boost the ABV but thin and dry the beer. The DME would leave the body of the beer almost unchanged.
DME will add 44 gravity Points Per Gallon.
 
I had the same thoughts about honey, thinning and drying out the beer. After reading other posts and thinking it over a bit, I believe I will leave it as-is. If it attenuates out, it will end up at around 4% ABV. Certainly nothing wrong with a session IPA. It's a happy beer as it is so maybe it's best to leave it that way?
 
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