brew_heel66
Member
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2014
- Messages
- 6
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Hey all, first time poster (as will likely be painfully obvious) but I've been lurking and reading for a couple of months now. Been wanting to home-brew for years and my gf was fantastic and got me a Mr. Beer for xmas this year to finally push me over the edge (don't worry the brown plastic keg has already been retired and everything is in 3 gallon glass carboys now). The beer style of the first isn't exactly my preference but my passion for brewing has grown rapidly, with much of my education coming from lurking around this forum. In fact my first batch is looking near perfection and has been ready to bottle for almost a week now.
This brings me to my first "problem" with brewing though. I have noticed that after several weeks of waiting and a bit of extra patience, I had a beautifully clear beer in my carboy but it had a bunch of unsightly and unpleasant looking particulates floating around on the top and suspended within the beer itself. They refused to drop out of suspension with time and thus, with a little guidance from this site, I ultimately decided to cold crash them out of suspension. I gingerly set the carboy into an attic/storage space covered in a few old dark t-shirts to keep light from destroying the beer and overnight it seems to have done the trick.
My worry is that I have heard mixed reviews on how much, if any, yeast will be viable for carbonating/bottle conditioning my beer. My GUESS was few to none and that I should rack it to my bottling bucket while cold and add yeast and priming sugar there. So issue #1: is that a correct assumption or viable method? And issue #2: If that is a good idea, how much yeast should I add to a cold crashed (it is still sitting in the storage space) 2 gallon batch of american "ale"? FWIW I have a "fresh" packet of champagne yeast on hand and was thinking somewhere around 1 tsp. but the last thing I want to do is under carb or create bottle bombs.
Sorry for the extra long post but I know the devil is truly in the details with home brewing and figured the better informed others were, the more they could help. Thanks again in advance for any and all help. Prost!
This brings me to my first "problem" with brewing though. I have noticed that after several weeks of waiting and a bit of extra patience, I had a beautifully clear beer in my carboy but it had a bunch of unsightly and unpleasant looking particulates floating around on the top and suspended within the beer itself. They refused to drop out of suspension with time and thus, with a little guidance from this site, I ultimately decided to cold crash them out of suspension. I gingerly set the carboy into an attic/storage space covered in a few old dark t-shirts to keep light from destroying the beer and overnight it seems to have done the trick.
My worry is that I have heard mixed reviews on how much, if any, yeast will be viable for carbonating/bottle conditioning my beer. My GUESS was few to none and that I should rack it to my bottling bucket while cold and add yeast and priming sugar there. So issue #1: is that a correct assumption or viable method? And issue #2: If that is a good idea, how much yeast should I add to a cold crashed (it is still sitting in the storage space) 2 gallon batch of american "ale"? FWIW I have a "fresh" packet of champagne yeast on hand and was thinking somewhere around 1 tsp. but the last thing I want to do is under carb or create bottle bombs.
Sorry for the extra long post but I know the devil is truly in the details with home brewing and figured the better informed others were, the more they could help. Thanks again in advance for any and all help. Prost!
