LarryC
Well-Known Member
I am writing this post because I have asked this question in my early days and I see it here a lot. It goes something like "I pitched my yeast yesterday and there still isn't any activity!"
I'm an American and I hate waiting for pretty much anything so I am guilty of asking this question. However, I thought I'd share today's brewing experience to try and relieve some tension some of my other new to brewing friends may have. I brewed the AHS Toasted Coconut Porter last weekend. I pitched my yeast at 70° and put the carboy in the Igloo cooler. I kept checking on it over the next day and a half and there didn't seem to be any activity. Finally after about 40 hours, it started to have noticeable activity and the blow off tube was burping steadily.
To my dismay the noticeably active fermentation stopped after about 3 days. My intent was to rack to secondary after a week and add the toasted coconut so I just stuck with the plan. Well, today I moved it to secondary and checked the current gravity. Final gravity was supposed to be 1.014 and I hit 1.016 - DAMN, I guess it was doing OK even without a hug kroisen or lots of airlock activity. Oh, and by the way, the sample tasted great!
I'll let it sit in secondary for another week or so and then bottle it. Who knows, I might even get another point or two of attenuation between now & then
I guess I'm just repeating what my more experienced brewin' buddies have been saying - airlock activity, kroisen height, etc. don't tell the whole story on fermentation...
I'm an American and I hate waiting for pretty much anything so I am guilty of asking this question. However, I thought I'd share today's brewing experience to try and relieve some tension some of my other new to brewing friends may have. I brewed the AHS Toasted Coconut Porter last weekend. I pitched my yeast at 70° and put the carboy in the Igloo cooler. I kept checking on it over the next day and a half and there didn't seem to be any activity. Finally after about 40 hours, it started to have noticeable activity and the blow off tube was burping steadily.
To my dismay the noticeably active fermentation stopped after about 3 days. My intent was to rack to secondary after a week and add the toasted coconut so I just stuck with the plan. Well, today I moved it to secondary and checked the current gravity. Final gravity was supposed to be 1.014 and I hit 1.016 - DAMN, I guess it was doing OK even without a hug kroisen or lots of airlock activity. Oh, and by the way, the sample tasted great!
I'll let it sit in secondary for another week or so and then bottle it. Who knows, I might even get another point or two of attenuation between now & then
I guess I'm just repeating what my more experienced brewin' buddies have been saying - airlock activity, kroisen height, etc. don't tell the whole story on fermentation...