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NAUGHTYDOGBREWING

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 5, 2009
Messages
83
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1
Location
Vancouver, WA
Hello all. My names Jeremy, I'm new to these forums. I just bought my first brew kit. Right now I'm brewing a northwest pale ale. It's in primary right now. It's been 6 days and so far looking good, other than it seems to be slowing down a lot already. The "head" I cant remember what its called, correct me if you wish, is already gone and its bubbling once every 2.5 minutes as of today. not sure if that's too short of a fermentation or what, anyway, I'm glad to be brewing and my g/f totally supports me. I get my own "Toy" room where I ferment my beer, play with my computers, tune our snowboards, and all else I want to do in "My" room. In the short future I plan on brewing a Blueberry Ale or a "Ruby" clone from McMenamin's, then an IPA hopefully an Arrogant Bastard clone. Again, I'm very new and any tips anyone has for me are totally welcome. I look forward to talking with you all soon. Happy Brewing! :mug:
 
Welcome, Vancouver, from a fellow brewer just across the river in NoPo!

The "head" is called "krauzen".

It's OK just to keep the beer in the primary fermenter for a few weeks even if there's no apparent activity from the airlock. It takes a while for yeasties to clean up after themselves, even if they look finished. Your beer will be better for it!
 
Thanks for the welcome. Now that I know to call it krauzen, how do you pronounce that? also my first brew was a little low on OG It was supposed to be around 1.048 and with the corrected measurement for the temperature it was 1.043. How much lower would I be in alc. % and is that why it seems to be fermenting so fast?
 
It's pronounced KROY-zen. The original gravity shouldn't affect how quickly it ferments, unless it's a real big beer. What was your target OG?
 
Sorry, I thought I posted my target OG. it was 1.048, I ended up with a corrected value of 1.043 and my final is supposed to be near 1.014. I did start my first few days at about 80 degrees because I didn't have AC at the time. after that its been low to mid 70's.
 
Biggest thing about beer is to be patient and don't worry about it. As our friend always says: "relax. have a homebrew"

Of course that doesn't work on your first batch....hm
 
I thought it was, "Relax, Don't worry, Have a homebrew"? must be wrong :drunk: j/k. Too bad it doesn't work for my first batch. Idk what is going on. :fro: haha. just had to use the rainbow afro :tank:
 
That's pretty warm, as you know it's been hotter than usual around here lately. Do you have the ability to put your fermenter in a bucket of water? You really want the fermentation temp to be 63-69 or so if at all possible in order to keep the yeast from producing so many off-flavors, and a water bath will help. Putting your fermenter into a water bath moderates the temperature, especially if you then put some frozen ice packs in the water to keep the outer water cool.

Get a few 1-liter or 2-liter bottles, fill them up 3/4 of the way, and stick them in your freezer. When they're frozen solid, toss two of them into the water bucket that your fermenter is sitting in. Switch them every 8 hours or so for new ones, and put the melted ones back in the freezer. This ought to keep your temperature down into the mid-60's where it ought to be.
 
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