Just did it last night, so I figured it might change a bit as fermentation progresses. I'm just concerned because the wort us typically at least a little sweet prior to pitching; this one tasted like a green batch freshly finished.
smagee said:Well, the second runnings have come down around 1.012 (and will likely continue to drop a bit longer), and taste absolutely awful. It's fairly evident to me at this point that the hop compounds will indeed continue to bitter as the boil progresses regardless of whether the hops themselves are still present.
Ah well, I'll have to write this one off to experience and consider it an extremely large yeast starter. I needed to cultivate some more 3711 anyway.
Thoughts on Bottling this beer? Any one bottle them yet? I am at over 3 months on the oak and ready to bottle. I had them in 2ndary for 3 months before that. I am afraid that the beer will not carb correctly if I just add the priming sugar.
Thoughts?
Anyones KTG take a long time to carb? Mine have been bottled for a month and zero carb. There was a slight hiss when opening the bottle though.
I just bought my ingredients to brew this up again! Can't wait! I'm going to Partigyle up a black lager with the small beer.
Man, this thread is making me antsy! I brewed this in May, bottled at the end of September, with some fresh yeast to help carb, and plan to not touch it until Christmas (with maybe a little sample on my birthday a week before Christmas). Can't wait!
gingerdawg said:I am thinking of doing the same thing. How big of a batch will you do for the partigyle? 1/2 the size of the KTG batch?
RitsiGators said:Does anybody have any tasting notes of thier clone attempts? I am planning to make a RIS and am leaning towards attempting this one...
Another couple of questions: it seems that some people had huge fermentations, has that been a frequent issue? Also, how long should the oak be in it?
smagee said:Unless you're underpitching or keeping it chilled during fermentation, this is virtually guaranteed to give you a massive fermentation (as with most any "large" beer). I'd recommend using a larger-than-normal fermenter or splitting the batch between two buckets to ensure you don't lose much beer due to blowoff. And absolutely use a blowoff!
When soaking the oak in a port ( I have spirals ), is there any "right" way to do it? I've seen people soaking in tupperware covered and uncovered, some boil the oak first, some don't...
I'm hoping to get on this within the next couple weeks and figure I should get the oak soaking. It will probably be soaking for about a month before it needs to go in the keg.
Thanks.