If my refractometer has been spot-on with my hydrometer for over a dozen beers (most were between 1.050 and 1.065), is there any reason to doubt it's accuracy on a real heavy (1.100) wort?
Without supporting information, an OG miss of this size could be due to a missing ingredient; but ...my gravity came in a little lower than expected (1.088 vs 1.101) on an extract batch.
... with top-off water, stratification is a likely cause as well.I had a lot more steeping grain and hops (than I usually use) that surely soaked up some wort, that likely got replaced with top-off water.
Measuring the dilution will need some precise measurements. Maybe measuring dilution by weight and volume would be a good cross-check.I suppose if I dilute my hydro sample with equal parts water (hmm, by weight? or by volume?) I should be able to get a good hydrometer reading...
Since the hydrometer is measuring the amount of sugar in a specific VOLUME, I think diluting with equal parts by volume would have to be the way to go.Measuring the dilution will need some precise measurements. Maybe measuring dilution by weight and volume would be a good cross-check.
I've decided to just leave it be, it'll just be touch lighter on the ABV*. Now, if that whole pack of US-05 I added about 12 hours ago would stop slouching and ACT BUSY, I'd be so much less worried!Another approach might be to build a solution using simple sugar; take an SG measurements for solutions at around OG 50, 70, 90, 110.
Beer went from 1.088 down to 1.015 (so 9.5% abv), and has been sitting there for over a week. I've got about 2.8 gallons to bottle (guesstimating, not quite sure how deep the yeast cake is). Is there any kind of rule-of-thumb for ounces of bourbon to add to one gallon? I know the usual suggestion of dosing a small sample until the taste is good, and then scaling that up -- but that's not terribly practical when the beer still has a good hop burn and zero carbonation.*say, that'd leave space for a little bourbon flavor...
What's the hurry? Let it be for a month, it may still creep down ever so slowly.Beer went from 1.088 down to 1.015 (so 9.5% abv), and has been sitting there for over a week.
I only ask, because my gravity came in a little lower than expected (1.088 vs 1.101) on an extract batch.
I don't trust the plastic bucket with 2 gallons of deadspace to keep oxygen out (plus my own general impatience)!What's the hurry? Let it be for a month, it may still creep down ever so slowly.
I'd have sworn I'd recorded the original brix reading when I brewed this, but I can't find my notes on this one, so all I've got to go off is this forum thread, where post #3 says I got 1.088 (I always use Refractometer Calculator - Brewer's Friend with a 1.04 wcf). Anyways, it was a DME extract batch, and I'm quite certain the "miss" was adding too much top-off water.well if the refrac was right, it should read 10.5 now?
and that gravity i'm assuming was corrected right?
I'd have sworn I'd recorded the original brix reading when I brewed this, but I can't find my notes on this one, so all I've got to go off is this forum thread, where post #3 says I got 1.088 (I always use Refractometer Calculator - Brewer's Friend with a 1.04 wcf). Anyways, it was a DME extract batch, and I'm quite certain the "miss" was adding too much top-off water.
Correct, hydro said 1.015, refractometer reads roughly halfway between 10 and 11 brix.
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