If I remember correctly, it was about 67C (153F) for one hour.
Good to know. Thanks.
If I remember correctly, it was about 67C (153F) for one hour.
Oh, not sure if any body has seen this but it's a video about Kveik by the guy that helped Lallemand develop their dry Voss Kveik Strain. (I think). If nothing else it's a good watch, very informative, at least to me.
Good plan. I kind of lost my heat and (no heating pad) it seemed that when it went below 90* it really slowed down. It has all but stopped now, losing only a few points in the last couple of days. I have to remember though it has been less than 6 full days and it has chewed through a 1.079 wort to around 1.013, still impressive in my book. Pretty sure if I could have kept a 95* temp it would be done by nowDid my first Lalbrew Voss today. Went with an IPA. Pitched 6 grams on 5.5 gallons of 1.078 wort at 94°. I've got a heating pad in the fermentation chamber holding it at 95°. Thanks to everyone for all the advice. "New toy" is absolutely right!
Yea , a good idea. I didn't need it but started with one. 5g. in a 6g fermonster and it came close to the top but not quite.I thought it wise to attach a blow off tube.
Yea , a good idea. I didn't need it but started with one. 5g. in a 6g fermonster and it came close to the top but not quite.
Mine not flocking like I hoped, but that's not so important on this beer,, it's been an experiment from the beginning
Joel B.
WOW,, mine kept bubblin for a couple of days, not a lot just enough to say wait some more. I just got done putting it to sleep in bottles as I type. The only thing I might have any complaint about is that it didn't flock well. I'm sure it's some thing I did or didn't do but the beer tastes great for what it is, just a "beer". I know that some ppl will poo poo just a boozy beer. Hey it was a $32.00 kit, didn't expect a any awards with it.I ended up not needing the blow-off either, despite it being almost violently active for the past 24 hours. Speaking of which, it's now 6pm on day two and the airlock has flatlined.
My first foray with this yeast I have only one dis. I steeped 1lb of carared for color. I'm liking the beer for every thing else but just does'nt want to clear up. Made the same beer today w/out any steeping grains and it's almost clear as the yeastys kick in. (In like 2.5 hr. @97* only using the second half a pack.5.2 g. there abouts,,)I brewed my cream ale last Saturday afternoon, by evening it was a chugging along OG 1.050, Sunday night 1.010 and by Monday night at fg 1.007. dropped temp to 71f and waited rest of week to clear and will bottle tomorrow, 1 week after pitch.
I bottle it in 6-7 days and did at 5 days once.I finally managed to getting around to using this yeast today. I had two planned brew days postponed due to life. It happens
This stuff is nuts. Almost instant action inside the fermenter. Given most folks time tables, I should be packaging next Friday and sampling off my uKeg in...10 days?
Yeah, im okay with a little cloudy/hazy if the color is pleasant looking. I'm more concerned about that brownish, swampy looking murk though. OG sample had a pretty nice golden color to it though, so maybe it'll be a happy mistake.I used oats and mine never really cleared either. It was always a bit cloudy and actually a pleasant golden-honey-orange color. A brown beer might look less visually appealing. The next time I use it, I won't rush to keg it because I think the finished beer would have benefited from more time to clear in primary.
I swapped 3 times my last batch in the first day then all was well. I’ve heard it makes a good bitter but I haven’t tried yet. I could die happy drinking a bitter a day. I’d also like to make a stout.It kept pushing nearly all the liquid out of my S airlock last night and I ended up having to bust out one of my ole 3 piece airlocks that I never use anymore. Pretty wild. Also really digging the smell, hopefully some of that is staying in the beer and not all getting exhaled out haha.
Yeah, im okay with a little cloudy/hazy if the color is pleasant looking. I'm more concerned about that brownish, swampy looking murk though. OG sample had a pretty nice golden color to it though, so maybe it'll be a happy mistake.
The blonde I made with Hornindal is clear with no haze. I used whirlflock in the boil and I leave the bottles in the fridge for two weeks before drinking them.none of mine using Kveik have been clear but not “floaties” either
What was the grainbill like? Any dark grains or dark crystal/caramel malts?Yeah, im okay with a little cloudy/hazy if the color is pleasant looking. I'm more concerned about that brownish, swampy looking murk though. OG sample had a pretty nice golden color to it though, so maybe it'll be a happy mistake.
What was the grainbill like? Any dark grains or dark crystal/caramel malts?
Also, for the record, mine was hazy but not murky
I don't know but I wouldn't think it matters much. Maybe? As for the whirlfloc, I add Irish moss/whirlfloc at the 10 minute mark (give or take a few minutes) and again I'm not really sure how much difference it makes.This might be a dumb thought,,. Would filling the fermenter warmer (trying to keep as much heat) change how much "break" material stays in suspension? It seems like I get very little junk to keep out of the FV at aprox. 100*.
I do partial boils, so would it be smarter to let the wort cool more/longer and then add warmer/hot water to top it off in the FV in an attempt to start with less junk?.
I use 1/2 tablet of wirlfloc @ 5min left in boil, is that the right way to use it?.
I made the same beer as the first time but "without" the pound of steeped Carared and only 5.2g. of yeasties. So it was an all extract brew. Also found a heating pad that I'm using to keep it as close to the upper 90's as I can.
Any thoughts?.
Thanks,
Joel B.