TheBrewLebowski
Member
Background:
On 1/30/12 I brewed a coffee porter (extract recipe 5 gallon batch). The kits stated OG was 1.052 with a FG of 1.015. This gave an estimated ABV of 4.8%. I wanted something closer to 7%, so on the advice of the LHB store guy, I picked up 3 lbs of additional DME. On brew day, I decided to throw in about 3/4 lb of leftover DME that I had sitting around the beer cabinet before it went bad. All of the additions brought me up to an OG of 1.088. Oops! As per the instructions, I added 1/4 lb of ground fresh coffee beans toward the end of the active fermentation.
Now, here are some potential problems.
1) I neglected to make a starter. Wasn't thinking it would be this big a beer.
2) The yeast packet (wyeast 1099XL whitbread ale yeast) had been in my fridge for a month and a half. Not sure how old it was when I got it. The packet never swelled when I activated it. Having read the directions, I knew this wasn't really necessary, so I pitched it when the wort had cooled to 70 deg.
3) Fermentation was probably at the lower end of the temp range at a consistent 64 deg room temp.
4) It took two days to see any significant activity in the airlock. I know that is a bad indication of things, but every other beer I have made (10 previous brews) started showing activity within a few hours.
So after 3 weeks, I checked the gravity. Came up with 1.036. Roused the yeast a bit, then left it go another week. Gravity reading was unchanged. I decided to pitch a packet of champagne yeast to try to bring the grav down. After about two weeks, it has come down to 1.030 and got stuck there. The beer tastes and smells fine, other than being very sweet.
My question is, should I pitch more champagne yeast, or is there another trick I'm not aware of? Also, when I altered the OG as much as I did, can I expect a higher final gravity as well, or should it still attenuate down close to the recipes stated FG? This will be bottled, and I don't want any bottle bombs. Thanks for the advice!
On 1/30/12 I brewed a coffee porter (extract recipe 5 gallon batch). The kits stated OG was 1.052 with a FG of 1.015. This gave an estimated ABV of 4.8%. I wanted something closer to 7%, so on the advice of the LHB store guy, I picked up 3 lbs of additional DME. On brew day, I decided to throw in about 3/4 lb of leftover DME that I had sitting around the beer cabinet before it went bad. All of the additions brought me up to an OG of 1.088. Oops! As per the instructions, I added 1/4 lb of ground fresh coffee beans toward the end of the active fermentation.
Now, here are some potential problems.
1) I neglected to make a starter. Wasn't thinking it would be this big a beer.
2) The yeast packet (wyeast 1099XL whitbread ale yeast) had been in my fridge for a month and a half. Not sure how old it was when I got it. The packet never swelled when I activated it. Having read the directions, I knew this wasn't really necessary, so I pitched it when the wort had cooled to 70 deg.
3) Fermentation was probably at the lower end of the temp range at a consistent 64 deg room temp.
4) It took two days to see any significant activity in the airlock. I know that is a bad indication of things, but every other beer I have made (10 previous brews) started showing activity within a few hours.
So after 3 weeks, I checked the gravity. Came up with 1.036. Roused the yeast a bit, then left it go another week. Gravity reading was unchanged. I decided to pitch a packet of champagne yeast to try to bring the grav down. After about two weeks, it has come down to 1.030 and got stuck there. The beer tastes and smells fine, other than being very sweet.
My question is, should I pitch more champagne yeast, or is there another trick I'm not aware of? Also, when I altered the OG as much as I did, can I expect a higher final gravity as well, or should it still attenuate down close to the recipes stated FG? This will be bottled, and I don't want any bottle bombs. Thanks for the advice!