beerman123
Active Member
Ok so this is the first time I have made a Belgian Imperial Stout (and any stout for that matter) and I followed a recipe that I found online. Grain bill is as follows...
12lb Pale Malt
3lb Crystal 120
2lb Belgian Caramunich
1lb Belgian De-Bittered Black
1lb Aromatic Malt
1lb Belgian Chocolate
1lb Black Patent
1lb Flaked Wheat
1lb Flaked Barley
1lb Dark Belgian Candied Sugar
I also used a starter for the first time when pitching my yeast with WLP545. Fermentation went crazy for over a week and it has now slowed but is still bubbling away. Fermentation started at 68F and has gradually increased to 75F. 3 days from now it will have been in the primary for 2 weeks. For most of my other ales, I typically rack to secondary after 10 to 14 days in primary but I do not know what to do with this one. For those who Have experience with high ABV Stouts, should I leave it in the primary beyond 14 days, rack to secondary to age longer or bottle?
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12lb Pale Malt
3lb Crystal 120
2lb Belgian Caramunich
1lb Belgian De-Bittered Black
1lb Aromatic Malt
1lb Belgian Chocolate
1lb Black Patent
1lb Flaked Wheat
1lb Flaked Barley
1lb Dark Belgian Candied Sugar
I also used a starter for the first time when pitching my yeast with WLP545. Fermentation went crazy for over a week and it has now slowed but is still bubbling away. Fermentation started at 68F and has gradually increased to 75F. 3 days from now it will have been in the primary for 2 weeks. For most of my other ales, I typically rack to secondary after 10 to 14 days in primary but I do not know what to do with this one. For those who Have experience with high ABV Stouts, should I leave it in the primary beyond 14 days, rack to secondary to age longer or bottle?
Sent from my iPad using Home Brew