Slounsberry
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- Nov 28, 2016
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New all-grain brewer here, and been doing some experimenting, perhaps too early in my 'career'!
Back in November or so I made a brown ale, fermented fine in primary* and then I cold-crashed, bottled most of it and transferred 1 Gallon into secondary over a crushed cinnamon stick and the ~1oz of vodka it had been soaked in. Bottled that portion about 5 days later and to date it hasn't carbed. (Opened one at room temp to dump the other day and got a very minimal hiss but when opening at fridge temps they're about as flat as can be.) Bottles that were bottled without the cinnamon carbed up fine.
So I'm leaving out some details, I know, and can add them if requested. But my hunch is that the combination of cold-crashing in primary before transferring to secondary reduced the yeast population and then the vodka killed what was left? Does that seem possible? Or was it maybe just one of these two things that was the main culprit?
*Due to first use of freezer ferm chamber mixed with a bit of stupidity I setup my heater and temp probe in such a way that I accidentally cold crashed the batch part way into fermentation (heat rises...derp) but upon fixing the issue fermentation and Krausen picked back up and it went to completion. So I don't think that's related, but could be another minor factor.
Thanks!
Back in November or so I made a brown ale, fermented fine in primary* and then I cold-crashed, bottled most of it and transferred 1 Gallon into secondary over a crushed cinnamon stick and the ~1oz of vodka it had been soaked in. Bottled that portion about 5 days later and to date it hasn't carbed. (Opened one at room temp to dump the other day and got a very minimal hiss but when opening at fridge temps they're about as flat as can be.) Bottles that were bottled without the cinnamon carbed up fine.
So I'm leaving out some details, I know, and can add them if requested. But my hunch is that the combination of cold-crashing in primary before transferring to secondary reduced the yeast population and then the vodka killed what was left? Does that seem possible? Or was it maybe just one of these two things that was the main culprit?
*Due to first use of freezer ferm chamber mixed with a bit of stupidity I setup my heater and temp probe in such a way that I accidentally cold crashed the batch part way into fermentation (heat rises...derp) but upon fixing the issue fermentation and Krausen picked back up and it went to completion. So I don't think that's related, but could be another minor factor.
Thanks!