OzzyPeeps
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So a bit about my process. I brew large 20 gal/80l batches of either extract or partial mash.
I brew in "fermenter genius" 100l/25gal fermenters ...
They have a main lid which is like about 12 inch diameter and another little lid/port in the centre of the main lid which is like 1.5 inches ...
Up till now I've just been doing open transfers from them -
I would fill 4 un-purged cornys at an angle via the liquid dip tube and as they fill, the displaced beer in the FV is replaced with ambient air. (i.e. 21% oxygen)
On the last keg I open the main (big) lid so I can see what's going on with the cake and tilt the FV to get the dregs out ...
After dumping the slurry I start filling the tank - typically I will just tip the high grav wort in the "manhole" either directly from the kettle or using stock pots and then I top up with clean RO via transfer pump with a sparge head ensuring it is oxygenated as it is transfered - then I pitch.
But if course we are all trying to improve and refine our processes over time ...
I've been working hard at developing a zero O2 ingress/lodo strategy for these fermentors
The issue is that they are just big plastic buckets with no pressure rating and the big lids do not seal very well (small one is ok) - but what do you want for 100 bucks? (I want 4 cornies full of delicious beer!)
So having managed to get a half decent seal with a lot of f***ing about with plumbers tape and Vaseline - good enough to liquid purge kegs with ferm gas - I was ready to try to implement my new zero oxygen closed transfer.
It worked perfectly (for the beer getting packaged)
The kegs were purged and keg gas out went to FV gas in, replacing the gas in the headspace with CO2, so no oxygen ever touched the beer.
I repitched slurry from the batch just kegged and I always over pitch lagers (using nova right now gen3)
Normally i would expect it to be cracking off in a matter of a couple of hours after a repitch but this was Friday night 12 midnight Irish time and it's now Sunday 6pm - 42 hours ago - and not a sausage. Not a single bubble in the blow off -
My working theory and where I think I might have f'ed up is this:
As all of the beer in the FV was replaced by CO2 in the closed transfer, the splashing from the sparge head inside the tank as it was pumped in would only have been in contact with CO2 and therefore not getting oxygenated. (I only used the 1 inch port to get the sparge head in, as I didn't want to f with the seal on the main lid)
Think of a corny purged with CO2 - you can open the PRV and shake the **** out of it but that's not gonna get enough O2 into suspension for a healthy fermentation ..
That's my theory anyway ...
Hopefully I'm just being paranoid ...
It's novalager which I have read can lag and seem to be doing nothing but I assume that's from dry yeast and it seems like a hell of a lag.
Because of the size and weight of the tank, I can't "walk" it.
I have an air stone and a ****** aquarium pump but it's hard to even fantasize that would be enough to oxygenate that volume of wort
The only other thing I can think of is recirculating with the transfer pump but the same problem would obtain ... The sparge head would be in the headspace which is all CO2 so it would just be in a CO2 loop
Ii guess I could put my kettle above the open FV, and recirc from the FV tap through the sparge head into the kettle with the tap open so it drains back into the top of the FV ...
But obviously that's a last resort.
I'm looking for any advice from people who routinely repitch straight after a closed transfer (without cleaning FV) say in a fermzilla 55 or whatever.
There should have been a reasonable amount of O2 in the ro water as it was run open to a pot before pumping in
Also any advice from anyone with experience directly repitching novalager
How long would you wait before you start panicking?
Thanks guys ... I worked really hard on this beer so any advice welcome
If I'm honest I'm not sure how much attention I used to pay to the airlock as before it was inside the chamber and now it's out (visible)
I'd just set and forget. But with the change in process and I'm second guessing myself and getting paranoid ... It seems like an awfully long time ... Aaargh
The downside of doing big batches is if you F them up
Ozzy
Edit to add ... Thinking about it now I remember the last one done in the same tank was a repitched Vienna lager with the same yeast same amount and it was cracking off Verry quickly
It will be 48 hours from pitch in about 6hrs ... 12 midnight here
Would you try to intervene tonight or wait till tomorrow?
Is it worth waiting to see if it's just sluggish to get going vs stuck?
Thanks again
I brew in "fermenter genius" 100l/25gal fermenters ...
They have a main lid which is like about 12 inch diameter and another little lid/port in the centre of the main lid which is like 1.5 inches ...
Up till now I've just been doing open transfers from them -
I would fill 4 un-purged cornys at an angle via the liquid dip tube and as they fill, the displaced beer in the FV is replaced with ambient air. (i.e. 21% oxygen)
On the last keg I open the main (big) lid so I can see what's going on with the cake and tilt the FV to get the dregs out ...
After dumping the slurry I start filling the tank - typically I will just tip the high grav wort in the "manhole" either directly from the kettle or using stock pots and then I top up with clean RO via transfer pump with a sparge head ensuring it is oxygenated as it is transfered - then I pitch.
But if course we are all trying to improve and refine our processes over time ...
I've been working hard at developing a zero O2 ingress/lodo strategy for these fermentors
The issue is that they are just big plastic buckets with no pressure rating and the big lids do not seal very well (small one is ok) - but what do you want for 100 bucks? (I want 4 cornies full of delicious beer!)
So having managed to get a half decent seal with a lot of f***ing about with plumbers tape and Vaseline - good enough to liquid purge kegs with ferm gas - I was ready to try to implement my new zero oxygen closed transfer.
It worked perfectly (for the beer getting packaged)
The kegs were purged and keg gas out went to FV gas in, replacing the gas in the headspace with CO2, so no oxygen ever touched the beer.
I repitched slurry from the batch just kegged and I always over pitch lagers (using nova right now gen3)
Normally i would expect it to be cracking off in a matter of a couple of hours after a repitch but this was Friday night 12 midnight Irish time and it's now Sunday 6pm - 42 hours ago - and not a sausage. Not a single bubble in the blow off -
My working theory and where I think I might have f'ed up is this:
As all of the beer in the FV was replaced by CO2 in the closed transfer, the splashing from the sparge head inside the tank as it was pumped in would only have been in contact with CO2 and therefore not getting oxygenated. (I only used the 1 inch port to get the sparge head in, as I didn't want to f with the seal on the main lid)
Think of a corny purged with CO2 - you can open the PRV and shake the **** out of it but that's not gonna get enough O2 into suspension for a healthy fermentation ..
That's my theory anyway ...
Hopefully I'm just being paranoid ...
It's novalager which I have read can lag and seem to be doing nothing but I assume that's from dry yeast and it seems like a hell of a lag.
Because of the size and weight of the tank, I can't "walk" it.
I have an air stone and a ****** aquarium pump but it's hard to even fantasize that would be enough to oxygenate that volume of wort
The only other thing I can think of is recirculating with the transfer pump but the same problem would obtain ... The sparge head would be in the headspace which is all CO2 so it would just be in a CO2 loop
Ii guess I could put my kettle above the open FV, and recirc from the FV tap through the sparge head into the kettle with the tap open so it drains back into the top of the FV ...
But obviously that's a last resort.
I'm looking for any advice from people who routinely repitch straight after a closed transfer (without cleaning FV) say in a fermzilla 55 or whatever.
There should have been a reasonable amount of O2 in the ro water as it was run open to a pot before pumping in
Also any advice from anyone with experience directly repitching novalager
How long would you wait before you start panicking?
Thanks guys ... I worked really hard on this beer so any advice welcome
If I'm honest I'm not sure how much attention I used to pay to the airlock as before it was inside the chamber and now it's out (visible)
I'd just set and forget. But with the change in process and I'm second guessing myself and getting paranoid ... It seems like an awfully long time ... Aaargh
The downside of doing big batches is if you F them up
Ozzy
Edit to add ... Thinking about it now I remember the last one done in the same tank was a repitched Vienna lager with the same yeast same amount and it was cracking off Verry quickly
It will be 48 hours from pitch in about 6hrs ... 12 midnight here
Would you try to intervene tonight or wait till tomorrow?
Is it worth waiting to see if it's just sluggish to get going vs stuck?
Thanks again
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