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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Temps after fermentation has stopped?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

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

Righlander

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2008
Messages
506
Reaction score
6
Location
Largo Florida
So i just started using a ghetto swamp chiller to chill during fermentation. So i know the first 48 hours of fermentation are most important to dial in temp but...what about after that? do i keep the temps chill till i bottle?
 
I've been told once the beer hits final gravity, the fermentation temperature is less important. For example, I've fermented an ale at 68F & after it hit FG I let it sit at room temp. (~74F) until I bottled it. I did not taste any negative affects from doing this.
 
I do the same thing - let the beer slowly come to room temperature (a constant 75 in the basement) after fermentation starts to wind down. Seems to help the yeast finish the fermentation.
 
Once you transfer to secondary, is it true that it helps to clear beer in colder temps? like a basement?

Colder temperatures will help clear the beer. However, to let the beer properly condition, I would leave the secondary at around the same temperature as your primary. A day or two before you are ready to rack to the bottling bucket, introduce the colder temperatures to quickly clear the beer. You can do a search for 'cold crashing' if you have any questions on the process.
 
Colder temperatures will help clear the beer. However, to let the beer properly condition, I would leave the secondary at around the same temperature as your primary. A day or two before you are ready to rack to the bottling bucket, introduce the colder temperatures to quickly clear the beer. You can do a search for 'cold crashing' if you have any questions on the process.

Cool, I'll remember that.

My first batch was fermented at between 17-23c (62.6F -73.4F)

It has been clearing in a basement at about 50F for the past week.

My second batch is a lager and is presently fermenting at 50F - So this one will also condition @ 50F when its in secondary before doing a diacetyl rest.

My third batch is most likely going to be another Ale, so I'll try out what you said and see what happens.

Thanks for the tip :mug:
 
Back
Top