rgarcia78147
Active Member
Making a Blonde Ale with White Labs 001 ferm at 67 degrees for 7 days, now i am dry hopping in secondary carboy for around 7 more days. does it matter what temp i dry hop at or should i process with the same ferm temp?
And would you chill the beer down before kegging ? would that help everything drop down, to make for a clearer beer ?
Would that effect the process of dry hopping ? I plan to primary for 7-10 days, rack to secondary, after 7 days in the secondary, I'll dry hop for 5 days, then chill and rack to keg. does that sound like a good plan.. by plan i mean as long as the SG and all agree, I've gotten out of rushing ...lol... my first beer or two, I couldn't stop watching it and tasting.. it was crazy..Yes you can cold crash to help with clarity, more of the hop particles and yeast will fall out.
Would that effect the process of dry hopping ? I plan to primary for 7-10 days, rack to secondary, after 7 days in the secondary, I'll dry hop for 5 days, then chill and rack to keg. does that sound like a good plan.. by plan i mean as long as the SG and all agree, I've gotten out of rushing ...lol... my first beer or two, I couldn't stop watching it and tasting.. it was crazy..
Can you explain why you need to move your beer to secondary and let it sit for 7 days before dry hopping for 5? I made an APA that I left in the primary for 10 days and then dropped the hops right into there for another 5 days before bottling. Very good flavor and by the second day in the bottle was crystal clear. No secondary was involved so I didn't need to sanitize another vessel and didn't expose the beer to another chance for oxidation by racking.
Not sure to be totally honest with ya... lol .. I've just read what everyone one here says ( which is all different ) and kind of made a happy medium..Can you explain why you need to move your beer to secondary and let it sit for 7 days before dry hopping for 5? I made an APA that I left in the primary for 10 days and then dropped the hops right into there for another 5 days before bottling. Very good flavor and by the second day in the bottle was crystal clear. No secondary was involved so I didn't need to sanitize another vessel and didn't expose the beer to another chance for oxidation by racking.
Not sure to be totally honest with ya... lol .. I've just read what everyone one here says ( which is all different ) and kind of made a happy medium..
Guess it make's it quite easier, and Would be safe to say faster.. Since you're not stirring everything back up during the transfer to the secondary, So what's your take on chilling it down, before racking it into a keg.. ? Oh and I know you were'nt criticizing me, I take into perspectivem, that it's hard to express the right emotions over chat or text... lolI think you have a good answer. i wasn't trying to criticize but rather make you think about the process and why any one item is done. Many of us have quit using a secondary except in special cases because we've found that they generally aren't needed.
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