• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Secondary Fermentation Time

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Derek

Member
Joined
Oct 12, 2005
Messages
21
Reaction score
0
Location
Kelowna, BC, Canada.
I'm doing a Christmas Belgian ale, with White labs trappist ale yeast.

It that had an OG of 1.080. Primary fermentation got a little warm (~75 F), though Chimay supposedly goes to 78 F.

I racked to the secondary after 9 days, it was down to 1.030. I've dry-hopped and added spices to the secondary (cinnamon sticks, nutmeg, cloves, shredded ginger, etc.).

After 3 weeks in the secondary, this rocket fuel tasted like A$$!

How long should I leave it in the secondary? It's similar to the Unibroue recipe in beer captured (which recommends 6 weeks), but this has the added spices etc...

I'm hoping it'll condition a little more, but I don't want the extra stuff (ginger, cinnamon etc) to go bad!

Any advice?
Thanks!
 
Derek said:
I'm hoping it'll condition a little more, but I don't want the extra stuff (ginger, cinnamon etc) to go bad!

Any advice?
Thanks!

The alky will preserve the spices, so don't worry about them. Did you disinfect them before you added them to the mix? Cinnamon sticks and live ginger can probably harbour a few baddies in their porous surfaces.

With an O.G. that high, you'll probably want to go long on conditioning.
 
I steeped them at 170 F for 20 minutes (covered , cooled, and dumped the whole thing in).

It tasted very alcoholic, specifically fusil alcohols (not the fruity esters I was looking for). Very green/harsh... not smooth at all.

I'll be away at the 6 week mark, so I'm considering doing it this weekend (almost 5 weeks), or the following weekend (almost 7 weeks).

I guess if I leave it for the 7, I'll still have 8 weeks of bottle conditioning before Christmas...
 
I think you need a temp of at LEAST 180 degrees to sanitize things. 170 is probably too low. Not to say that this has anything to do with your flavor, but something to consider.

-walker
 
Back
Top