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temperature and fermantaiton

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didimcginty

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Jan 27, 2015
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I was wondering when is temperature no longer an issue when fermenting. I live in a philly suburb, my basement keeps my beer at about 74 degrees. That being to hot to ferment an IPA, if I where to get a controller and mini fridge, put it in at a controlled temp for a week, then take it out to let it age a bit, also so i could use the fridge and controller to ferment another beer. Would this work?
I like my IPA's to stay in the primary fermenter for 3 weeks then I put them in a secondary to dry hop for a week, then keg. Would allowing the beer temp to raise up to the 74 degree mark affect the beer after it finishes fermentaion?
 
If you have the patience to allow each batch to fully ferment out before moving the fermenter to your "74°F or less" environment, you'll be doing just fine.

While colder storage has the advantage of slowing the aging process, 74°F isn't horrible - probably in the ball-park of the floor temperature in the typical retail shop for the stuff that isn't kept cold...

Cheers!
 
Thank you for your response, makes sense. I just wasn't sure at what point, if any, temperature no longer would be a big deal.
 
While you could narrow it down a bit with SG measurements, if you let each batch run a full two weeks under temperature control before kicking 'em out into the wild (so to speak ;)) you'll likely do well...

Cheers!
 
Even better, I can be patient, kind of. Thank you again for all your help, I don't like heat.
 
I was wondering when is temperature no longer an issue when fermenting.

Once the bulk of the fermentation is over. There's no catch-all here, but a week is a fairly safe bet for most ales. Only way to tell for sure is by measuring gravity - if it's near your targeted FG then you're good to go.
 
So once FG is reached, then it would be safe to assume it is safe to pull out and let age in my 74 degree basement?
 
I have been trading out frozen 2L bottles in the am and pm for my last 3-4 batches (in a swamp cooler) to maintain proper temps over 10-14 days. The temps in SC have been 99*-104* over the last two weeks! I hope the Scottish 80 is ok as it has been room temp during that period but that's after a month in the primary. Should be good.
 
your fine after a few days. to be safe, a week. I let mine go to room temp (80F+) after 5-7 days and never have an issue. I use s-05 for my pales/ipas. belgian strains sometimes ill let go after 2 days to get some more esters out of it.
its the first few days thats important to keep temps under control. if u dont want to spend the money on a freezer, give the cool-brewing bag a shot.

also no need to 2ndary to dry hop. unless your getting to the yeast to re-use. the one cool thing with a temp controlled freezer is its easier to cold crash it before kegging. you could simulate that with the cooler bag by putting a bunch of frozen bottles in there.
 
Thank you all for your help, I can't afford a freezer, but that is my goal. I figure if I can get a small fridge for now, I could ferment one bucket at a time. Thank you everyone again for your responses, it is much appreciated.
 
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