NWHopHead
Member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2014
- Messages
- 18
- Reaction score
- 5
Hi there,
Background: I am brewing a stout and the krausen has gone nuts. I was prepared (so no sticky ceilings!) and put together a blow off tube into a gallon jug of sanitizer solution. Only problem is that the gallon jug overflowed down into the bottom of the chest freezer, and last I checked I was now at just shy of 4 gallons of fermenting beer. I replaced the sanitizer jug with a fresh jug having poured out a gallon of blackish beer/sanitizer mix and probably a healthy dose of yeast?
Question: Will the new volume change the amount of yeast that needs to be in the beer? I think I lost a fair bit of yeast since it I'm brewing an ale and I understand the yeast to be "top fermenting". Should I add additional yeast? Leave it all alone? Stay calm and have a homebrew?
Is there a better technique for the blow off tube? Should I run the tube into a bucket and not a jug? Does it matter how far down the tube goes into the fermenter and blow off jug/bucket?
Finally...am I fooling myself into believing there isn't a fire hazard running the brew belt inside a fridge? I thought it would give me much finer/more pinpoint control but I'm starting to second guess my decision.
Key Stats:
Steeping Grains: British Black malts
Malt: Light DME
Yeast: Wyeast 1056 American Ale (created starter)
OG: 1.091
Volume: 19.4L/5.125 Gal
Ferm Temp: 18.5C / 65F - using a heat belt in conjunction with a STC-100 controller and a 5 cubic foot chest freezer
Aeration: Pure O2 through air stone
Background: I am brewing a stout and the krausen has gone nuts. I was prepared (so no sticky ceilings!) and put together a blow off tube into a gallon jug of sanitizer solution. Only problem is that the gallon jug overflowed down into the bottom of the chest freezer, and last I checked I was now at just shy of 4 gallons of fermenting beer. I replaced the sanitizer jug with a fresh jug having poured out a gallon of blackish beer/sanitizer mix and probably a healthy dose of yeast?
Question: Will the new volume change the amount of yeast that needs to be in the beer? I think I lost a fair bit of yeast since it I'm brewing an ale and I understand the yeast to be "top fermenting". Should I add additional yeast? Leave it all alone? Stay calm and have a homebrew?
Is there a better technique for the blow off tube? Should I run the tube into a bucket and not a jug? Does it matter how far down the tube goes into the fermenter and blow off jug/bucket?
Finally...am I fooling myself into believing there isn't a fire hazard running the brew belt inside a fridge? I thought it would give me much finer/more pinpoint control but I'm starting to second guess my decision.
Key Stats:
Steeping Grains: British Black malts
Malt: Light DME
Yeast: Wyeast 1056 American Ale (created starter)
OG: 1.091
Volume: 19.4L/5.125 Gal
Ferm Temp: 18.5C / 65F - using a heat belt in conjunction with a STC-100 controller and a 5 cubic foot chest freezer
Aeration: Pure O2 through air stone

