TastyAdventure
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I accidentally pitched my yeast around 95 F or so. Will it be ok? A couple hours after that it was down to 72... Will it just take longer to start or what?
Thanks man. Any other opinions on this? Bump?
If you get it to mid to low 60's asap it should be ok. It will take longer to start b/c yeast needs to acclimate to a stable temp before it starts its growth phase. They make off flavors almost immediately at the start of the growth phase, so give it another week after you reach final gravity to let the yeast reabsorb off flavors.
Correction it was California, not California common in the stout.
Will harvesting the yeast from these be ok? Or has the yeast just been totally thrown off by my bone headed mistake?
Correction it was California, not California common in the stout.
Will harvesting the yeast from these be ok? Or has the yeast just been totally thrown off by my bone headed mistake?
Since I have no temp control (yet) in the summer I have to pitch with high temps usually. Typically I brew saisons and wheats which I like with fruity esters, but even beer which would normally have a clean taste, like centennial blonde are acceptable to me with the fruity esters. Temp control is vital to getting beers to taste to style...not so much when you rdwhahb...ymmv of course!
jro238 said:2 words:
"swamp cooler"
This is the reason we don't have a guest bathtub, we have a beer bathtub![]()
Is the tub with ice bottles reliable enough to keep the temp pretty consistent? Given that I change them out every 12 hours?
Is the tub with ice bottles reliable enough to keep the temp pretty consistent? Given that I change them out every 12 hours?
I'm afraid that I'm not following the rationale here. What does lack of temp control have to do with pitching at a high temp?
If anything, you would want to pitch cooler if you don't have solid fermentation temp control.
When cooling water is 75 degrees in the summer and your basement is 72 summer pitching temp is about 80 unless I'm patient and pitch after 12 hoirs or so o cooldown. I need not only to get a ferm chamber but also a 2 stage immersion cooler. I'm unmotivated I guess because I'm strapped for cash and also I typically don't mind the esters. Ymmv of course!
If you want, you can pump ice water through any immersion chiller after cooling as much as the hose water will allow.
A $39 submersible pump from Northern tool sitting in a cube cooler recirculating ice water through the chiller works great for me. Even in the heat of summer, I can get ale wort to 60*F (20# of ice) or lager wort to 44*F (30# of ice).
ColoHox said:Banana esters, apple acetaldehyde, fusel alcohol (which can eventually contribute ester flavors), and buttery diacetyl are all associated with high temperature fermentations.