Prostheta
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- Jun 4, 2015
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Hi everyone - first post after being a long-time lurker, so apologies for my first words being ones that bring a problem to the table....
We set up a couple of buckets of extract mix a few weeks back; everything more or less by the book. Sanitisation, monitoring of OG through to FG and temps, priming and racking in 5l mini kegs for secondary.
The kits were a St. Peters IPA and a Woodforde Wherry. The primary ferments took about two weeks (the IPA finished first) rather than one, but hey. It takes what it takes I guess.
The IPA is textbook. I would praise a bar if I were served that. Perfect carbonation and an all-round belter. Zero issues with the 5l mini kegs either. Oddly, it's better than the commercial product from the bottle.
The Wherry however....isn't. We had an issue during the primary with the lids of both buckets cracking and no longer producing an adequate seal. Only as much as prevented the airlock bubbling, but not massive air exchange. It happened on both buckets so I don't see this as the culprit. The IPA had a far bigger crack in the lid.
The Wherry stuck out at 1022-24 for a while. Far too long. The top of the ferment dropped clear with a few small islands of bubbles persisting. Everything dropped out of solution, it seems. Rocking the baby didn't wake her up, so I stole the yeast from another kit we have and produced a starter to see what we could do. Pitching that produced little to no visible result, however after a week the gravity dropped to a steady 1014 for three days.
Racking this up into 5l kegs and priming each one with 20g of table sugar should have been golden. Exact same process as what succeeded with the IPA.
Broaching a keg tonight after two weeks produced a sweet and virtually flat disappointment. It might be that the other kegs are not the same as this one, however I doubt it.
Stuck ferments are what they are, however these were maintained at a more or less constant 20-21°C. I don't quite understand as to how the yeast could choose to drop out of solution so early (I pitched an additional 250g of dextrose in the initial brew) despite apparently ideal conditions and as to why a second pitch of yeast didn't take as vigorously as it should....
Apologies for the wall of text. It is quite apparent that there was alcohol in there, even if it did taste like arse.
We set up a couple of buckets of extract mix a few weeks back; everything more or less by the book. Sanitisation, monitoring of OG through to FG and temps, priming and racking in 5l mini kegs for secondary.
The kits were a St. Peters IPA and a Woodforde Wherry. The primary ferments took about two weeks (the IPA finished first) rather than one, but hey. It takes what it takes I guess.
The IPA is textbook. I would praise a bar if I were served that. Perfect carbonation and an all-round belter. Zero issues with the 5l mini kegs either. Oddly, it's better than the commercial product from the bottle.

The Wherry however....isn't. We had an issue during the primary with the lids of both buckets cracking and no longer producing an adequate seal. Only as much as prevented the airlock bubbling, but not massive air exchange. It happened on both buckets so I don't see this as the culprit. The IPA had a far bigger crack in the lid.
The Wherry stuck out at 1022-24 for a while. Far too long. The top of the ferment dropped clear with a few small islands of bubbles persisting. Everything dropped out of solution, it seems. Rocking the baby didn't wake her up, so I stole the yeast from another kit we have and produced a starter to see what we could do. Pitching that produced little to no visible result, however after a week the gravity dropped to a steady 1014 for three days.
Racking this up into 5l kegs and priming each one with 20g of table sugar should have been golden. Exact same process as what succeeded with the IPA.
Broaching a keg tonight after two weeks produced a sweet and virtually flat disappointment. It might be that the other kegs are not the same as this one, however I doubt it.
Stuck ferments are what they are, however these were maintained at a more or less constant 20-21°C. I don't quite understand as to how the yeast could choose to drop out of solution so early (I pitched an additional 250g of dextrose in the initial brew) despite apparently ideal conditions and as to why a second pitch of yeast didn't take as vigorously as it should....
Apologies for the wall of text. It is quite apparent that there was alcohol in there, even if it did taste like arse.