drs650
Member
Hi All - quite new to brewing beer, working on my third batch right now. So far all the beer I've made has been delicious. All extract brewing, and all with pretty minimal intervention. Specifically, I brew my wort, and then pour it into a sanitized plastic bucket. I pitch my yeast, plug my airlock, and then leave it alone for 2 weeks. After 2 weeks, I siphon into the sanitized bottling bucket, and then fill my bottles. Minimal transfer, minimal movement, minimal exposure to contamination.
I've read quite a bit about secondary fermentors, and I'm a little torn. If I were adding flavors part way, or having a problem with too much sediment in my bottles, a secondary fermentor sounds like a great solution. But I'm keeping all my recipes simple so far, and nearly all my bottles so far have had minimal sediment. There's a tiny layer on the bottom of each bottle, but so far (knock wood) I've been really clean, and not had a lot of grunge in any bottles.
My question is, are there other advantages to a secondary fermentor? Seems like it only introduces another opportunity to contaminate the beer. Would love any advice.
thanks,
David
I've read quite a bit about secondary fermentors, and I'm a little torn. If I were adding flavors part way, or having a problem with too much sediment in my bottles, a secondary fermentor sounds like a great solution. But I'm keeping all my recipes simple so far, and nearly all my bottles so far have had minimal sediment. There's a tiny layer on the bottom of each bottle, but so far (knock wood) I've been really clean, and not had a lot of grunge in any bottles.
My question is, are there other advantages to a secondary fermentor? Seems like it only introduces another opportunity to contaminate the beer. Would love any advice.
thanks,
David