el_caro
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Thanks BB
Tasted a sample of mine last night, which would be day #16 after pitching yeast. The sweetness noted on day 10 has largely faded but a hint remains. Still cloudy. Some hop presence coming though but very subtle and subdued from pre pitch hydrometer sample. The corn aroma has gone, but still some corny flavor coming through.
What next? I think maybe ill pull a hydrometer sample this weekend and see where she sits. Could be time to dump the yeast from below and ramp down to 32 degrees for lagering. My OG was 1.048. When should i proceed with the lagering phase? i was thinking about a Diacetyl rest but i cannot detect any butterscotch right now, so I might skip this step. Is the a particular gravity or percent attenuation at which I should start to "lager" the beer at?
Once I've done the first yeast dump I'll probably need another yeast dump once she gets to 32 and sits for a few days. I think this yeast gets really chunky so might be tough to get out of the dump hole, and I had planned to just lager it in the conical.
TD
TrickyDick said:Update-
had dates wrong in last post - April, not March! DOH!
Pitched yeast 4/22 - today is 5/18
last check, last weekend 1.023. I adjusted the temp to 50, and it is at 50, had seen up to 51 F.
Gravity today is 1.020.
Still tastes of creamed corn.
getting worried. Had thought it'd have been done by now. Gonna sit tight, and check it again in a week.
TD
g-star said:You should be worried. This beer should have been done in 7-10 days, not a month. This suggests a problematic fermentation. The creamed corn notes indicate a problem with your hot side process (weak, short, or covered boil).
Thanks for the advice.
I think I used two vials of yeast for the starter. I used yeastcalc.com with the jamil stir plate option and two stages. WLP 838.
The starter fermented out faster than any other starter I've ever made,
I think my issues stem from a couple of things.
First off I cold pitched at 45 and let it free rise up to 49. However, my thermo well temp probe is sitting in the fermenter and 11 gallons of liquid. It never raised to 49 like I thought it would. By the time I noticed, was a week. I tried to leave door open a bit, maybe an hour, to warm up. It then fluctuated between 47-49 for at least another week. I realized that it was still fermenting too low, below optimal temps. So I bumped it to 51, and its been there a week now. I think I'll bump it to 52' and verify temp controller accuracy with a pulled sample of beer and an accurate thermometer.
Also I think I'll sanitize a spoon and try to stir up the yeast a bit through the fermenter lid, to try and get things going. I have used my IR thermometer on the conical, and I am dubious of its accuracy on stainless steel, but there is a temp differential between the top of the fermenter and the bottom. It's hard to know exactly where the beer level is inside, but even still I was shocked by the differential in temps, at least 10 degrees, much much colder at the bottom.
TD
Sorry for the Fermenting issues TD. That really blows...I have Kai's Helles batch right now that's at 1.015-16. It's been fermenting since last Sunday. The temp was about 47-48F. I thought I raised the temp in the lager chamber yesterday to 63 for a D-rest, but I guess I forgot. I pulled it out of the freezer now and I will probably keg it tomorrow or Tuesday. As I mentioned before, this Helles batch that I'm drinking right now is probably the best I've ever made. I hope I can keep the consistency. I have a keg that's been lagering for a week or so and this new batch. If I can keep this quality, I'll start making 10 gallon batches. Keep going man, Don't give up. I wish you were closer, I'd like for you to try it.
A lot of good info in this thread. I have been brewing for a couple of years, but have only done ales (I've stayed away from lagers because I haven't had the fridge space, etc.). I am looking to try my first lager and had a couple of questions. My first was is ok to lager in a keg rather than in a carboy? From some of the discussion in this thread it sounds like that is pretty common and not an issue, but just wanted to make sure. My second is how do most keep their beer at the lower temps during primary? With ales I have never worried about temp too much because letting them ferment in my basement has always been fine. With a lager, though, the primary is supposed to be in the 50's usually (right?). So, do most use a water bath? If that is the case is it just a matter of putting the primary vessel in cool water and adding ice as needed to keep the temp where it is supposed to be? Thanks for any tips.
Mine hit 1.016 today, so its moving in the right direction. With luck I'll be finished next weekend and can move along to diacetyl rest, and then lagering stages.
The corny flavor is starting to weaken.
TD
+1 on Yoopers comment. It's pretty tough to do lagers if you can't get close to the low 50's. I brew pretty much only lagers and temp is everything. I hold the fermentation temp at 48. Since I've been holding temp from brew day to lagering, my beers have been coming out excellent.
MoreCowbell said:Help!
I made an extract with steeped grains using Wyeast Bohemian Lager Strain
Primary for 2 weeks at 67 degrees.
Secondary for 3 weeks at 35 degrees
Bottled with 5oz corn sugar.
2 weeks......no carbonation????
I should add that the bottles have been around 65 and ther is no sediment at all.