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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Stuck fermentation and re-pitch

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

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

SaisonMan

Supporting Member
HBT Supporter
Joined
Jan 26, 2022
Messages
179
Reaction score
147
I'm brewing a Tank 7 clone and have hit the dreaded 3724 stall. Gravity started at 1.079 and has been stuck at 1.024 for about 10 days. I need the fermenter for another beer, so I pitched half a sachet of US-05, hoping that would be enough to get it down. After 48 hours, there's maybe a bubble a minute in the blowoff jar, and the gravity is still at 1.024.

I haven't done a re-pitch before. I guess I was expecting something to be happening because there was so little to go in terms of gravity. Was that a mistaken belief? Should it take longer because I didn't re-pitch that much? Should I have pitched more? Should I stop asking myself questions and just sit tight?
 
well..what is target FG? what temperature? how much unfermentables? recipe and process specifics might help us guess the problem.
 
The link doesn't work for me.
The target FG says 1.017, but that's based on Wyeast's projection of 78 percent attenuation. I was expecting with this saison yeast that it would go much lower than that. Was I wrong?
While it is a bit hard to wrap the brain around the idea of a diastatic yeast that only attenuates 76-80% I would still be inclined to err on the side of believing the manufacturer. Have you tried warming it up?
 
Did you pitch the US-05 dry or make a starter?

I’m a big fan of using dry yeast but I think when pitching into partially fermented wort I would make a starter to prevent the yeast from having to go through their growth phase in a somewhat inhospitable environment. Pitching a viable starter would ensure the yeast are awake and ready to go to work, eliminating one more variable.
 
The link doesn't work for me.

While it is a bit hard to wrap the brain around the idea of a diastatic yeast that only attenuates 76-80% I would still be inclined to err on the side of believing the manufacturer. Have you tried warming it u

The link doesn't work for me.

While it is a bit hard to wrap the brain around the idea of a diastatic yeast that only attenuates 76-80% I would still be inclined to err on the side of believing the manufacturer. Have you tried warming it up?
Yes. I fermented at 90F for quite awhile. I guess I've been conditioned to think that saison yeast attenuates in a big way.
 
Did you pitch the US-05 dry or make a starter?

I’m a big fan of using dry yeast but I think when pitching into partially fermented wort I would make a starter to prevent the yeast from having to go through their growth phase in a somewhat inhospitable environment. Pitching a viable starter would ensure the yeast are awake and ready to go to work, eliminating one more variable.
Pitched it dry. Maybe that's it.
 
Making a starter (even with dry yeast) and pitching it at high-krausen or slightly after in the hope the yeast have developed an alcohol tolerance should provide the best shot at restarting fermentation. A direct pitch seems much less likely to succeed...

Cheers!
 
Making a starter (even with dry yeast) and pitching it at high-krausen or slightly after in the hope the yeast have developed an alcohol tolerance should provide the best shot at restarting fermentation. A direct pitch seems much less likely to succeed...

Cheers!
Should I make a starter with a new packet of US-05, or will the half packet I have left be enough?
 
I'd have warmed it up and waited it out and let the inevitable 3724 thing happen...but I understand you want this batch out of the way, so I'd take the full pack and make a starter of it, let it get to the "rampage" phase, and pitch it and see what happens...

Cheers!
 
I'd have warmed it up and waited it out and let the inevitable 3724 thing happen...but I understand you want this batch out of the way, so I'd take the full pack and make a starter of it, let it get to the "rampage" phase, and pitch it and see what happens...

Cheers!
FWIW, I had struck out on being able to order a couple other saison strains, so I chose 3724, forgetting its reputation for stalling. Oh, well.
 
A bit embarrassing for someone with your username, no?
Indeed. The irony is that I’m not sure why I picked the name. I like a lot of different beers. I must have been drinking a saison at the time and was inspired. But of the 40 or so batches I’ve made, I think four have been saisons.
 
Update: Made a starter out of a pack of US-05 and pitched it three days ago. Basically, there's not much activity, a bubble every 10 seconds or so, and gravity has dropped marginally to 1.020.

I want to free up the conical to have temperature control to make a lager. I've thought about transferring the saison to a bucket fermenter and letting it ride out fermentation in that, but I'm concerned about introducing oxidation. Should I be?
 
I want to free up the conical to have temperature control to make a lager. I've thought about transferring the saison to a bucket fermenter and letting it ride out fermentation in that, but I'm concerned about introducing oxidation. Should I be?
Do you have kegs? If so, do a closed transfer into 1 or 2 of them and make sure you get some yeast with it. Then let them ride in a warm place for a few more weeks.

I've kept a few "kegged" Saisons like that in a spare/warm (read: broken) refrigerator for a month or longer trying to chip a few more points off. In some cases it worked, others didn't budge, but tasted wonderful for what they were at 1.008-1.010 or so. One had turned into a delicious juicy pineapple "Saison" at around 8% ABV.
 
I kegged this a few days ago, burst carbed it and ... it tastes great. Tart and peppery with enough dryness for my taste. The FG was 1.017, which makes it 8.1% ABV, close enough to Tank 7's 8.5% ABV. If I had been patient with the yeast, it probably would have gotten me to 1.010 (at least), which would be 9.1%. My liver doesn't need that. I haven't seen Tank 7 in stores where I live, but I'm guessing it's much dryer than mine. This exercise in impatience has made me realize that I don't need a Saison that's as dry as Death Valley. This one's really enjoyable, and I might just do it the same way next time. Thank you for all your help and suggestions.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top