1.150. Is there enough fluid in there for it to float?
I read 1.148. Still pretty rough though. Wonder what that'll ferment down to?
Your extract isn't mixed in completely and you got a very concentrated sample. There's no way to miss your OG by that much unless you forgot to top up with any water or something. So long as you used all the ingredients, followed the instructions and topped up to 5 gallons (assuming it's a kit for a 5g batch) you're OG is what it was supposed to be.
It was:What's your recipe?
Are you saying the sample came from your boil kettle with 1.5g of water? Or from your fermenter after topping up with more water to 5g?
<------- Totally lost as to this thread...
Chesire are you saying this is the graivty pre-top off?
Yep. It's a partial boil and he took his sample from the kettle before topping up. I thought it was something like that.
You say you split it between two fermenters... how did you do the split? Pour half into each and top each one up to 2.5? Or pour it all into one fermenter, top up to 5 gallons and then transfer half to another fermenter?
I split it into each, and topped up to 2.5. I'm guessing you're going to say I should have done it the other way, aren't you?![]()
Actually, if you did it the other way, I was going to warn you that one might be higher OG than the other. The way you did it, it's probably closer than it would be otherwise. When you add your top up water, it NEVER mixes up completely no matter what you do. So if you put it all in one, topped up and then poured off half, you'd have one with a much higher OG than the other becuase most of the concentrated wort would sink to the bottom of the first fermenter.
I disagree Cat, if he stirred it while adding the top-off water to 5 gallons, it would be thoroughly mixed. Then if he split the two, they would be exactly the same. The way he did it introduces a lot of variables. One could have a slightly higher level of wort, and the other can have a slightly higher level of water.
Either way, you'll be close. This isn't rocket science, and everything doesn't have to be 100% on the money, so don't worry if one is a point or two higher that the other. It'll still be beer.
I'm not saying that you screwed up in any way, just that splitting the batch before topping off reduces the chance of being 100% equal. I doubt that the numbers would be far enough apart for it to matter on the finished product, so don't sweat it. And, you're using two different yeasts, so there's even less chance to notice any slight difference in the starting gravity in the final product.
I disagree Cat, if he stirred it while adding the top-off water to 5 gallons, it would be thoroughly mixed.
Try this some time. Boil up an extract partial boil batch. Cool it down and pour it in your fermenter. Then top up with water. Give it a good stir to mix it. Then wait about one minute and take a hydrometer sample from the top inch and another from the bottom inch. I bet you a sixer of my next batch that they won't be the same.![]()
I will. In fact, I have 6.5 lbs of LME that I need to use, so it sounds like a plan. Of course, I'll need to rack from the top down to be able to get a sample from the bottom, but the top will be easy enough.
I'm not doubting your logic. Higher gravity liquid is heavier than lower gravity liquid. But water soluble sugar will mix throughout when stirred.
I'll PM you with my address when I get the results. I'm looking forward to that 6er...![]()