michaelbevilacqua
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- Dec 5, 2006
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I just bottled and received a FG of 1.010. The beer is hoppy as it should be but the strength just isn't there. The OG at boil (chilled to 60F) was 1.045.
I'm on my second batch of all grain. This time around I used 10lbs plain Breis, 10lbs pale Breis and 2lbs Crystal. Held a 158F for 1 hour, sparged with 3 gallons of 170F water, recirculated, did my boil, cooled with a chillzilla wort chiller to 60F in under 10 minutes into my primary, waited 1 hour for the trub to settle, siphoned into my glass carboy and pitched my started which consisted of 2 packages of Wyeast American Ale in a starter solution of 1 quart water, 1 cup malt extract that was happily fermenting for 2 days.
Everything seemed fine until the fermentation seemed to stop suddenly in the 4th day. There was a good amount more of trub on the bottom by this time as well. I would say at least one inch worth.
Where am I going wrong? Should I let the trub settle for longer in my primary? Does this risk contamination if I do? I'm going for high strenght dry pale ale.
Any help is greatly appreciated!
I'm on my second batch of all grain. This time around I used 10lbs plain Breis, 10lbs pale Breis and 2lbs Crystal. Held a 158F for 1 hour, sparged with 3 gallons of 170F water, recirculated, did my boil, cooled with a chillzilla wort chiller to 60F in under 10 minutes into my primary, waited 1 hour for the trub to settle, siphoned into my glass carboy and pitched my started which consisted of 2 packages of Wyeast American Ale in a starter solution of 1 quart water, 1 cup malt extract that was happily fermenting for 2 days.
Everything seemed fine until the fermentation seemed to stop suddenly in the 4th day. There was a good amount more of trub on the bottom by this time as well. I would say at least one inch worth.
Where am I going wrong? Should I let the trub settle for longer in my primary? Does this risk contamination if I do? I'm going for high strenght dry pale ale.
Any help is greatly appreciated!