Korben
Well-Known Member
Like the name there neuron.. very chemistry-ish
Homebrewing combines the best of gourmet cooking, beer drinking and chemistry lab.
I'd be interested on an answer about dry hopping loose pellets in the secondary. I got the last portion of a parti-gyle IPA and my share is very cloudy. It is on day two in the secondary (plastic pail) dry hopped with 2 oz pellets. Bottle day is either Saturday or Sunday this weekend. Would I be ok with gelatin now, or should I wait for Wednesday night? Would this have an adverse affect on the dry hopping?
TIA
Wow! 10K+ views and only 75 replies.
I just add the bloomed gelatin to the primary after fermentation has finished. Makes for a nice thick yeast cake and mitigates the potential for yeast siphonage.
Once, the gelatin set so hard that the cane actually rested atop the gelatin layer but, I use the whole packet cause it's easy and cheap.
How do you get the gel out of the carboy? Or are you using a bucket?
Add it (gently) to the secondary (or keg) as youre racking your beer.
So I can vouch for Biermuncher telling us to use 1 Tbs.
I use a tablespoon per five gallon batch.
Trust me:
- I use a Tbs per five gallons
- I let the powder sit for 10 minutes to slightly dissolve.
- I heat the mix over medium heat for about 5-7 minutes until the gelatin completely disappears...never letting it boil.
If you do this, it will work just fine.
Shameless plug for gelatin...
I transferred my Centennial Blonde to secondary Sunday night. The beer had been in primary for a little over two weeks and the gravity was down to 1.003. I added some gelatin to the secondary and the following night, 24 hrs later, the beer in secondary was crystal clear. I had only used it once before, but now I'm convinced. I'll be using it on any beer that I want to be pleasing to the eye.
For those of us who do not use a secondary and just leave our beers in the bucket for four weeks: Can gelatin be added to the primary fermenter prior to bottling?