jalgayer
Well-Known Member
Hi All,
I brewed a Belgian Dubbel on March 6th with an OG at 1.082.
Using the yeasts attenuation % listed on the wyeast website, I calculated that the FG should be between 1.020 and 1.025. (I know that those numbers are guidelines)
After a VIGOROUS and fast starting primary at between 69-71F (3 days or so of churning like I had thrown the carboy is a washing machine) it settled for a slower fermentation for a few days. The fermentation was likely strong due to a good yeast starter, yeast nutrients and the recipe I brewed had ~1.5# of honey at flameout.
So I take the gravity today and I am at 1.011 which is WELL under the 1.020-1.025 I was shooting for.
I am rather sure that it is done and wont go lower.
I guess I am just looking for comments, advice on this post. I am thinking that since honey is so fermentable it may have helped the attenuation... Maybe the yeast fuel helped a bit... and a nice starter and STRONG fermentation.
Thanks for any insight or comments on this.
I brewed a Belgian Dubbel on March 6th with an OG at 1.082.
Using the yeasts attenuation % listed on the wyeast website, I calculated that the FG should be between 1.020 and 1.025. (I know that those numbers are guidelines)
After a VIGOROUS and fast starting primary at between 69-71F (3 days or so of churning like I had thrown the carboy is a washing machine) it settled for a slower fermentation for a few days. The fermentation was likely strong due to a good yeast starter, yeast nutrients and the recipe I brewed had ~1.5# of honey at flameout.
So I take the gravity today and I am at 1.011 which is WELL under the 1.020-1.025 I was shooting for.
I am rather sure that it is done and wont go lower.
I guess I am just looking for comments, advice on this post. I am thinking that since honey is so fermentable it may have helped the attenuation... Maybe the yeast fuel helped a bit... and a nice starter and STRONG fermentation.
Thanks for any insight or comments on this.