i recently started brewing and im on my second batch. This is a wheat ale and i have a fridge with a outside thermostat set at 75F. On the third day it quit working and was at 91F and i repaired it. Will that one day affect the taste of the beer.
kombat said:Finally, note that actively fermenting beer can be up to 10 degrees warmer than the surrounding ambient temperature. So if your fridge is set to 75° F (which is already 5-10 degrees too hot for an ale fermentation, by the way), then the beer is probably actually at 80-85° F, which is much too hot.
thanks for the advice i used wyeast and it was already fermenting by the next morning i also used nutrient and it was hot for mayby 12 hrs. Ill wait it out and see.
thanks for the advice i used wyeast and it was already fermenting by the next morning i also used nutrient and it was hot for mayby 12 hrs. Ill wait it out and see.
What strain of Wy? Different strains do different things at different temps. For most ale strains, 75º is too warm, but some strains do just fine at those temps. 90º's is too warm for most any strain aside from some saisons, and even those should be started cool.
As for the nutrient, I always recommend it, use it myself at home and in the brewery I work at. But nutrient and temp are two different things, high temp is high temp, and can result in off flavors regardless of the health of the yeast. I say your best bet is to let this batch ride out, worst case is you have some high temp off flavors and know exactly where they came from. Chalk it up as a learning experience.
Thanks, that appears to be only Wyeast strains though. I did find this one which seems very extensive, think I will be bookmarking!
http://byo.com/resources/yeast