fuchspelz
Member
Hi all,
I have made a batch of a recipe I've repeated a few times (OG: 1.044) using Philly Sour and had a question regarding bottling. On the previous renditions of this beer, the FG finished out at 1.006 each time. This time, the FG seems to have reached its end at 1.011 (been stuck there for 5 days now). I followed identical mashing procedures (same temp, same time, same grain bill) so I don't think this batch is any less fermentable than the last few, and the fermentation temps were similar to other batches, cooler (~68F) for the first few days before letting it naturally come up to room temp (~72F). I am mostly thinking that maybe my yeast rehydration was different for this batch or the yeast itself was older and possibly there were less cells pitched into the batch than the other times.
In any case, my concern is the remaining fermentables going into the bottling bucket compared to the other batches I have done. Each time I have bottled this beer, I have used EC-1118 as an additional yeast to deter the Philly Sour from decreasing the pH further and due to Philly Sour's supposed lack of CO2 production. I fear that if I use the same amount of dextrose that I have in the past, the beer may end up over-carbed and possibly lead to bottle bombs. Conversely, I fear the opposite - putting in too little dextrose in anticipation of the EC-1118 using the left over fermentables only to find out that they're actually not fermentable sugars and I have now produced a flatter beer.
Any ideas, experience, or suggestions?
I have made a batch of a recipe I've repeated a few times (OG: 1.044) using Philly Sour and had a question regarding bottling. On the previous renditions of this beer, the FG finished out at 1.006 each time. This time, the FG seems to have reached its end at 1.011 (been stuck there for 5 days now). I followed identical mashing procedures (same temp, same time, same grain bill) so I don't think this batch is any less fermentable than the last few, and the fermentation temps were similar to other batches, cooler (~68F) for the first few days before letting it naturally come up to room temp (~72F). I am mostly thinking that maybe my yeast rehydration was different for this batch or the yeast itself was older and possibly there were less cells pitched into the batch than the other times.
In any case, my concern is the remaining fermentables going into the bottling bucket compared to the other batches I have done. Each time I have bottled this beer, I have used EC-1118 as an additional yeast to deter the Philly Sour from decreasing the pH further and due to Philly Sour's supposed lack of CO2 production. I fear that if I use the same amount of dextrose that I have in the past, the beer may end up over-carbed and possibly lead to bottle bombs. Conversely, I fear the opposite - putting in too little dextrose in anticipation of the EC-1118 using the left over fermentables only to find out that they're actually not fermentable sugars and I have now produced a flatter beer.
Any ideas, experience, or suggestions?