I have a nice stout going on and thought it could use a little fruit flavor and a slight FG boost so I added a 2 pound bag of figs from Costco. It was in the primary for 5 weeks before adding the figs.
I used a food processor to chop up the figs very finely along with about a cup of the stout pulled from a sanitary sampler (SSBrewtech conical). I froze the lot for a few nights, thawed, then froze again and thawed.
Unfortunately, I was so focused on keeping oxygen out of the fermenter when I opened the lid to add the fruit (by pumping in CO2 through the blow-off cane) that I totally forgot to heat up the fruit to around 160F for 10-15 min...!
So I added un-heated figs, albeit finely chopped up ones and rocked the fermenter back and forth to rouse the yeast. Of course there was no activity at all for about a week. Then, suddenly, there was a semi-vigorous fermentation for about 1.5 days. I have not yet checked with a hydrometer since it is still fermenting, though it is slowing down.
So why such a huge delay in the fruit fermentation here? Just wondering so I can learn from the experience.
Also, any issue with not heating the fruit up? The stout is >8% ABV so I am assuming (hoping) that the alcohol will kill any baddies that happened to go into the beer. Am I just getting less accessible sugar for the yeast to feed on?
I used a food processor to chop up the figs very finely along with about a cup of the stout pulled from a sanitary sampler (SSBrewtech conical). I froze the lot for a few nights, thawed, then froze again and thawed.
Unfortunately, I was so focused on keeping oxygen out of the fermenter when I opened the lid to add the fruit (by pumping in CO2 through the blow-off cane) that I totally forgot to heat up the fruit to around 160F for 10-15 min...!
So I added un-heated figs, albeit finely chopped up ones and rocked the fermenter back and forth to rouse the yeast. Of course there was no activity at all for about a week. Then, suddenly, there was a semi-vigorous fermentation for about 1.5 days. I have not yet checked with a hydrometer since it is still fermenting, though it is slowing down.
So why such a huge delay in the fruit fermentation here? Just wondering so I can learn from the experience.
Also, any issue with not heating the fruit up? The stout is >8% ABV so I am assuming (hoping) that the alcohol will kill any baddies that happened to go into the beer. Am I just getting less accessible sugar for the yeast to feed on?