So last Tuesday I brewed an extract chocolate stout that came in at around 1.072. I pitched a properly rehydrated pack of US-05 after dosing it with pure oxygen for about 45 seconds. I put it in a water bath with an aquarium heater and had it at 64-65 degrees. Fermentation was going great. Great Krausen, ton of airlock activity etc.. then about 3 days ago I went to check on it and the aquarium heater had died and the water was at 53/54 degrees, its frigid here in Wisconsin right now.
I was going to take a gravity reading yesterday but there seemed to be a bit of krausen left on top.
So my question is, do I let it stay at that temperature and hope the yeast can chug along, do I say screw it and take a gravity reading to see how much its got left to go(it should get to about 1.010) or do I bring it up from the basement sloshing the whole thing around as a result and let it get up to 70-ish to make sure it ferments all it can.
Do I risk screwing it up with the krausen on top since bringing it up two flights of stairs can be a little violent?
Is US-05 a yeast that can handle that low of temperature?
I'm pretty certain that the beer was at 65 for at least 5 days, so at least during the growth phase the temperature was consistent.
I was going to take a gravity reading yesterday but there seemed to be a bit of krausen left on top.
So my question is, do I let it stay at that temperature and hope the yeast can chug along, do I say screw it and take a gravity reading to see how much its got left to go(it should get to about 1.010) or do I bring it up from the basement sloshing the whole thing around as a result and let it get up to 70-ish to make sure it ferments all it can.
Do I risk screwing it up with the krausen on top since bringing it up two flights of stairs can be a little violent?
Is US-05 a yeast that can handle that low of temperature?
I'm pretty certain that the beer was at 65 for at least 5 days, so at least during the growth phase the temperature was consistent.