jacobev
Member
Hey guys, I'm new here, so sorry if this subject has been beaten to death. I've found a bunch of posts about leaky lids (consensus: Leave it, it's fine), but nothing that explicitly mentioned this twist(?).
So:
Brewed a batch of West Coast Blaster (BCS) two days ago (Saturday). Never saw any bubbles in the airlock, but even as a new brewer, I knew not to expect anything so quickly. BUT: I've pushed on the lid of the fermentor, enough to make the airlock bubble (using a bubbler-type airlock). When I let go of the lid, the water level on the fermenter-side of the airlock gets pulled up by the relative vacuum inside the fermenter (as it should). However, over the next 5 seconds or so, the levels equalize. So, I messed around with it a few minutes ago, and realized that part of the lid lets some air escape (can hear it when I press hard on the lid).
So that's all normal, but what worries me is that I'm swamp cooling this beer. It's been sitting in a big ol' stopped up utility sink, with water up to the 4 gallon line, and an old t-shirt covering/cooling it. I'm worried that stagnant water/moist environment will be more capable of introducing more nasties to my fermenter than usual. What do you all think?
My plan is to rack to a secondary at some point, because I want to try dry-hopping this baby. I'm still 15 or so gravity points off though.
So, what's your advice? Should I rack sooner, rather than later, to decrease the risk of contamination? Is it worth running out and buying a temp controller for my spare fridge to get it out of that swampy environment as soon as possible? Should I stop being such a newbie and relax a little?
Thanks
So:
Brewed a batch of West Coast Blaster (BCS) two days ago (Saturday). Never saw any bubbles in the airlock, but even as a new brewer, I knew not to expect anything so quickly. BUT: I've pushed on the lid of the fermentor, enough to make the airlock bubble (using a bubbler-type airlock). When I let go of the lid, the water level on the fermenter-side of the airlock gets pulled up by the relative vacuum inside the fermenter (as it should). However, over the next 5 seconds or so, the levels equalize. So, I messed around with it a few minutes ago, and realized that part of the lid lets some air escape (can hear it when I press hard on the lid).
So that's all normal, but what worries me is that I'm swamp cooling this beer. It's been sitting in a big ol' stopped up utility sink, with water up to the 4 gallon line, and an old t-shirt covering/cooling it. I'm worried that stagnant water/moist environment will be more capable of introducing more nasties to my fermenter than usual. What do you all think?
My plan is to rack to a secondary at some point, because I want to try dry-hopping this baby. I'm still 15 or so gravity points off though.
So, what's your advice? Should I rack sooner, rather than later, to decrease the risk of contamination? Is it worth running out and buying a temp controller for my spare fridge to get it out of that swampy environment as soon as possible? Should I stop being such a newbie and relax a little?
Thanks