Salukibrew
Member
Hello,
I am currently about 48 hrs into the primary fermentation of my second homebrew. I have done alot of reading about various topics and issues within the process. One that particularly interests me because I want to make the highest quality brew possible is the issue of fermentation temperature. Currently my 5 gal carboy and beer are in a controlled environment within a closet designated for fermentation. The ambient air temp within the room is somewhere around 71 F. I am guessing (and by looking at carboy thermom) that the reaction of fermentation has raised the temp of the beer about 10-15 degrees. Putting it just over 80F which I have read can lead to pronounced esters and other off flavoring in the beer. Therefore in order to rectify my problem I have poured about 6inches of water into the bottom of the trash can, wrapped a wet towel around carboy and placed a fan in the room to encourage air circulation and evaporation. This has brought the temp down to around 70-72F. My question to you all is: is this still a safe temperature for the yeast? How cool is to cool for the yeast which in this case is Whitelabs Hefe 300? At what temperature am I going to be in danger of my yeast becoming dormant and creating a stuck fermentation? And finally in about 3-5 days I am going to rack to secondary can I slack off on temp control around then because a majority of vigorous fermentation has been completed?
Let me know if you all have any advice for a newbee.....I appreciate it.
Cheers,
Big Cypress Brewing
I am currently about 48 hrs into the primary fermentation of my second homebrew. I have done alot of reading about various topics and issues within the process. One that particularly interests me because I want to make the highest quality brew possible is the issue of fermentation temperature. Currently my 5 gal carboy and beer are in a controlled environment within a closet designated for fermentation. The ambient air temp within the room is somewhere around 71 F. I am guessing (and by looking at carboy thermom) that the reaction of fermentation has raised the temp of the beer about 10-15 degrees. Putting it just over 80F which I have read can lead to pronounced esters and other off flavoring in the beer. Therefore in order to rectify my problem I have poured about 6inches of water into the bottom of the trash can, wrapped a wet towel around carboy and placed a fan in the room to encourage air circulation and evaporation. This has brought the temp down to around 70-72F. My question to you all is: is this still a safe temperature for the yeast? How cool is to cool for the yeast which in this case is Whitelabs Hefe 300? At what temperature am I going to be in danger of my yeast becoming dormant and creating a stuck fermentation? And finally in about 3-5 days I am going to rack to secondary can I slack off on temp control around then because a majority of vigorous fermentation has been completed?
Let me know if you all have any advice for a newbee.....I appreciate it.
Cheers,
Big Cypress Brewing