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When the fermentation slows/stops, the foam will subside. You'll be left with some floaters and unidentifiable stuff on top - ignore it. The yeast will still be in the liquid although it will be dropping out over time. If the ferm gets stuck, roust it up (gently - no splashing) and move the fermenter to a warmer spot. That should get the yeast working again.

I'm going to be moving a little less than 5 gallons onto two gallons of water to dilute, and then splitting the batch into two separate carboys. Its been fermenting for less than 24 hrs. Do you think I should just syphon off and ignore the foam? Will there be enough yeast in the liquid?
 
Honestly at this point... just go for it! You're only gonna learn from this mistake one way or another... keep us informed, I'm interested.
 
Alright, I did it. I boiled some more hops in just over 2 gallons of water for 60 minutes and then diluted and split the batch up into two fermenters. I now have 2 6 gallon fermenters going. Each are about half full, which is a lot of head space, but primary fermentation just started yesterday, so I'm hoping that doesn't bother it. It needs the oxygen at this point, right?

Anyway, I hope this brew turns out alright. With 16 pounds of extract plus specialty grains and hops in there, I've got a lot of money and time into it.
 
Do you have a 6 gal carboy that you can rack into as a secondary when the primary is finished? If not, try to come up with some kind of secondary set-up that has a lot less head space (5 gal carboy and a 1 gal growler or something...)
 
Alright, I did it. I boiled some more hops in just over 2 gallons of water for 60 minutes and then diluted and split the batch up into two fermenters. I now have 2 6 gallon fermenters going. Each are about half full, which is a lot of head space, but primary fermentation just started yesterday, so I'm hoping that doesn't bother it. It needs the oxygen at this point, right?

Anyway, I hope this brew turns out alright. With 16 pounds of extract plus specialty grains and hops in there, I've got a lot of money and time into it.

I would'nt worry about the head space, it will fill with gases as it ferments. Also, I leave mine in primary only seldom use a secondary. You only need to boil water for 10 minutes, your plan was additional hop for 15 I think. Good luck and let us know how it works out, I think you will be OK. Cheers:)
 
Do you have a 6 gal carboy that you can rack into as a secondary when the primary is finished? If not, try to come up with some kind of secondary set-up that has a lot less head space (5 gal carboy and a 1 gal growler or something...)

Yes, that is exactly the plan. As soon as it is done fermenting for the most part, I'm going to combine the two into one 6 gallon carboy. That should be perfect.
 
I would'nt worry about the head space, it will fill with gases as it ferments. Also, I leave mine in primary only seldom use a secondary. You only need to boil water for 10 minutes, your plan was additional hop for 15 I think. Good luck and let us know how it works out, I think you will be OK. Cheers:)


About the boil, I forgot to mention that I recalculated everything and I must have been missing something because my IBUs came up a bit short with a 15 minute boil. I had to add a half ounce and do a 60 minute to get it to where I wanted with what hops I had left.

Hopefully this turns out alright, its going to have to age for a while, but I'll keep everyone posted.
 
It will turn out fine. If you had left it, it would have probably stalled at a high gravity. You would have had to dilute it then or add a high gravity yeast. Best to do it now while the yeast will still eat up the oxygen.
 
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