You're welcome. We're all here to help. I don't think this process has been filled with mishaps at all. It actually sounds like it has been going good and you're just slightly stressed. Which I will say...now relax.As always, thank you Hello. Also, as always... Since nothing has gone right with this project, I can't find my capper. Every single thing I own is here, except that. Have to run down street and borrow friends. On hold again with everything waiting in sanitizer. Upsetting.
You are right, I misspoke on the style. If he used the priming calculator then he should be good. If anything, he won't have gushers!Isn't it a pale ale he made, not an ipa?
That is awesome. As far as finding a beer she'll like, every beer I have brewed, even sub 20 IBU beer, has been deemed "too bitter" by a close friend. He loves Bass, Blue Moon, Fat Tire, and Smithwicks and yet my sub 20 IBU beers are bitter. I can't quite figure it out so I gave up. I'll buy beer for him.A few positives have come from this revitalization of the hobby at least...
My fiance, who hates beer even though I assure her there is one out there she would like if she would lose her preconceived idea of what beer is, has helped me with this batch from start to finish even through my frustrating moments. The idea was that while she was helping me or at least just providing company, we would talk about the last of our wedding plans that needed to be tied up. In the course of doing so, we end up talking about possible locations to move to since we are in a rough part of the neighborhood and would like to GTFO and buy a house in a nice area. The first thing she says is, "We need a place that has a garage or finished basement you can turn into a man cave to do this stuff instead of in the kitchen."
Score one for the good guys.![]()
Haha, nice thank you Union.. I unfortunately have little control over temperatures in my house but with the fall weather hitting now my upstairs room where I have them is pretty much steady 70 degrees. I fermented in our room with AC at 68 degrees. So I guess I'll just have to try one at some point then. I was shocked when I was bottling; I expected it to be an assault of hops and it smelled like a fruit/citrus hop...smelled so good and almost exactly as described on the recipe. Unbelievably excited. I want it now!
Going back to the researching now, I've found a bunch of opinions on bottle conditioning times. The general idea seems to be 2-3 weeks, until I read just now that a pale ale could take less than 2 weeks.
Anyone have insight on this matter? Normally I would've popped one a week and taken notes but given the smaller size of this batch and effort I have made to do this one the right way (despite the little mishaps), I would like to let this one be for a more accurate time.
edit: Given the pictures I posted of that Hefeweizen, does that seem like it was a carbonation issue or infection? Other? More reading up makes me think it may have fermented too warm. Just curious. Its water under the bridge, but I would like to try to prevent that from happening again.
Is there a reason you think there is a problem with your priming sugar? You calculated the amount, dissolved it in water, added to the wort and mixed well? The only thing that I always question is about the residual CO2, which is based on the temperature. But seriously, the difference between 2.5 volumes and 2.75 volumes... are you really going to be able to tell?
I still don't see why you say nothing has gone right with this.
You did take a sip, yes? That is a right of passage, to drink a healthy sample of that beer you're bottling.![]()
Congrats on the wedding as well!
Is there a reason you think there is a problem with your priming sugar? You calculated the amount, dissolved it in water, added to the wort and mixed well? The only thing that I always question is about the residual CO2, which is based on the temperature. But seriously, the difference between 2.5 volumes and 2.75 volumes... are you really going to be able to tell?
Your hefeweizen looks infected to me. Especially since you said some bottles foamed to the end. Did you taste it? Even slightly infected lighter beers will taste sour or off.
You should challenge yourself to let these sit for 2 week minimum before you open one. And then wait one more week. 2 weeks will get carbonation, but it always seems better after 3 or 4. And during those 2-3 weeks, don't read anything about carbonation or conditioning!
I still don't see why you say nothing has gone right with this.
I just mean after dissolving it and letting it cool a bit, I put about half of it in the bottling bucket then as I siphoned from carboy to bucket I would add the rest when it was half full or so.
Put a bottle in the refrigerator this morning to chill for 8 hours and see what it's like after week 1. It's tormenting me. Might have to take a half day.
Attempt at your own risk. At least they wasted the mostly cheap stuff.
http://youtu.be/mxQCkAqkFYo 21 ways to open a Corona
http://youtu.be/3wY0VszZLJo 50+ ways to open a beer
The more I read and research, looking for and digging through recipes the more I am getting overwhelmed. Very few have instructions seemingly assuming many steps to be common knowledge. Being rusty, god I have some stupid questions:
They all look to have a list of ingredients to add to the boil, with no boiling times. Is it safe to assume this means you just boil all these things together? For an hour? Is there a certain temp. that I'm missing or just boil? I understand hop schedules just fine.
Maybe I'm reading into it and fretting too much and should just get at it. Regardless the outcome, I am doing this... Will be at brew supply store in hour and a half. I have decisions to make, feeling stupid![]()
I've read a lot of differing opinions on conditioning and many different numbers as to how long to do it. I have a few extra bottles outside of an even case so I'm just going to try them each week to see how things progress and take lots of notes. The whole point of this thread wasn't to whine, but to learn as much as I could to make it worth me getting back into it.
If it's good, it's game on. Buying an old freezer off a family member for temp control and starting next batch.