akthor
Well-Known Member
I made a Nut Brown Ale true brew meastro kit. It is fermenting in my basement the strip thermometer on the side of the bucket has said 68 deg F since I put it down there. Is this ok?
There are already a couple of threads going about fermentation temperature so I'll just post a question here, if that's OK, instead of starting a new thread.
I don't have a basement (and very few people do in this part of the country, something about the soil that can't support basements, which is ironic because of all the tornadoes we get). Anyway, outside temperatures have been 100+ here for probably the last month or so, and inside I have my thermostat set to 74º, but during the day it gets up to about 77º in the house with the AC running full time. This is all just a really long way of saying that my beer is warm, fermenting in the range of 76º-78º according to the strip thermometer. I'm using Wyeast American Ale yeast (1056?) for a Belgian amber ale. I'm curious as to what issues I can expect to encounter fermenting at this temperature, and maybe see if there are some suggestions as to how I can keep my fermenter cooler in the future. I think I read a thread that suggested keeping the fermenter in a tub of water or something like that. Do you just put the fermenter in there and leave it? What do you do as the water itself warms up? Change it? Add ice? And if you're adding ice how much do you add, keep it from getting too cold, etc.?
Wow. I think I asked a lot here.
After doing some searching I'm starting to warm up to the idea of doing a dedicated refrigerator for fermenting. I found a thermostat that you can plug a fridge/freezer into with a temperature probe that goes inside for around $60. Have any of you done something like this? Is it worthwhile?
Edit: In the meantime, I guess it's a good thing I like fruity tasting beer...