luckybeagle
Making sales and brewing ales.
My first AG batch was a Weihenstephan Hefe Weissbier clone (single step infusion, no decoction--so I guess not a perfect clone).
I missed my mash temp, boiled for only 60 minutes, pitched hot, fermented hot (75F) didn't make a starter, broke my thermometer halfway through, missed my OG by at least 10 pts, used the wrong hops--I made pretty much every error I could have. It was still decent-tasting albeit a little yeasty and thin.
I repeated the recipe and corrected all of my mistakes, hit all of my numbers, used the right hops, built up a starter using Wyeast 3068, fermented at 69F etc. I'm now 8 days after pitch and have been at my target FG for two days now. I went from blow off tube to airlock once fermentation mellowed out, and now average one bubble every 2+ minutes. Samples taste good for an uncarbonated, unrefrigerated hefeweizen but... is it too early to bottle given this info?
I missed my mash temp, boiled for only 60 minutes, pitched hot, fermented hot (75F) didn't make a starter, broke my thermometer halfway through, missed my OG by at least 10 pts, used the wrong hops--I made pretty much every error I could have. It was still decent-tasting albeit a little yeasty and thin.
I repeated the recipe and corrected all of my mistakes, hit all of my numbers, used the right hops, built up a starter using Wyeast 3068, fermented at 69F etc. I'm now 8 days after pitch and have been at my target FG for two days now. I went from blow off tube to airlock once fermentation mellowed out, and now average one bubble every 2+ minutes. Samples taste good for an uncarbonated, unrefrigerated hefeweizen but... is it too early to bottle given this info?