philosofool
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 8, 2007
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Last night I brewed an all grain barleywine. Since I am expecting it to be in primary for four weeks, I decided to ferment it in my plastic bucket and leave my stainless for some other stuff.
The yeast is going nuts and I have discovered that the lid on said fermenter, which is very new, cannot hold a tight seal at the bung.
*F*** this. I just stayed up until two o'clock in the morning doing a 25 pound mash with nine and a half gallons of water, carefully check everything along the way and hitting a gravity of 1.108. I spent a week building up a starter. You all know how much extra work it takes to brew a barleywine, not to mention the cash. In a normal beer, I might just let it ride and rack to secondary a little early while there's still counter pressure, but I'm really reluctant to lose this one to a minor infection that might not rear it's head until after 6 months of bottle conditioning. So...
What would you do? Transfer it now, while the yeast is going nuts to eat the O2 into the steel fermenter?
The yeast is going nuts and I have discovered that the lid on said fermenter, which is very new, cannot hold a tight seal at the bung.
*F*** this. I just stayed up until two o'clock in the morning doing a 25 pound mash with nine and a half gallons of water, carefully check everything along the way and hitting a gravity of 1.108. I spent a week building up a starter. You all know how much extra work it takes to brew a barleywine, not to mention the cash. In a normal beer, I might just let it ride and rack to secondary a little early while there's still counter pressure, but I'm really reluctant to lose this one to a minor infection that might not rear it's head until after 6 months of bottle conditioning. So...
What would you do? Transfer it now, while the yeast is going nuts to eat the O2 into the steel fermenter?