premington
Well-Known Member
I'm sure this has been discussed before... I've been perusing various threads.
This is my first lager. I made a SMASH beer--a Stella clone. Simple recipe... very sessionable and low-SRM beer (1.045). 9-1/2 lbs. of Pilsner malt, 2 oz of Chech SAAZ, and .75 oz. of Challenger. (Decided to add Challenger later... so I guess it's not a SMASH. <grin>) I'm using WLP830, German lager yeast. It's cold as hell in the garage, so I thought I'd give things a go with a lager yeast, just for fun.
I got a 1.6 L, 1.040 starter going in the garage two days before pitching. It was bubbling away quite happily at 46.6 F as we were ready to do the boil. I planned to pitch in the 50s, so I took the starter (on spin plate) inside to warm up a little as we finished the boil. Was able to cool the wort down fast, due to the cold temps outside.
My brewing buddy, who borrowed some of my stuff, forgot to bring back my oxygen. He lives about 50 minutes away, so this was a major disappointment. So I had to aerate through vigorous splashing and stirring of the wort with the wort chiller. <sigh> Not happy about this.
Okay... Time to pitch. Yeast is spinning away and bubbling with a good 1" of foam on top. Pitched it in the wort, put the top on with a blowoff tube, and set it in the back corner of the garage. Pitched temp was 52 F. The beer is currently at 45.1 F. It's dropped about 7 F since pitching.
It's been about 39 hours, and I see no activity. In fact, the blowoff tube stuck in the growler with distilled water and a dash of StarSan still shows about 1" of water in the tube. The air in the tube doesn't appear to be displacing due to CO2 production.
So, what to do? Do I bring it inside and warm it up? Do I "watch and wait"? Do I open the top of the fermenter and do a gravity check to see if anything is happening?
Being new to lagering, I'm not really sure what to do. I have a lot of thoughts of what may have gone wrong (poor aeration, shocked yeast, etc.), but maybe nothing's wrong.
I'm scatching my bald head. Hmmmmmmmmmm... Curious to hear what other more experienced lager brewers think. Any advice is appreciated!
This is my first lager. I made a SMASH beer--a Stella clone. Simple recipe... very sessionable and low-SRM beer (1.045). 9-1/2 lbs. of Pilsner malt, 2 oz of Chech SAAZ, and .75 oz. of Challenger. (Decided to add Challenger later... so I guess it's not a SMASH. <grin>) I'm using WLP830, German lager yeast. It's cold as hell in the garage, so I thought I'd give things a go with a lager yeast, just for fun.
I got a 1.6 L, 1.040 starter going in the garage two days before pitching. It was bubbling away quite happily at 46.6 F as we were ready to do the boil. I planned to pitch in the 50s, so I took the starter (on spin plate) inside to warm up a little as we finished the boil. Was able to cool the wort down fast, due to the cold temps outside.
My brewing buddy, who borrowed some of my stuff, forgot to bring back my oxygen. He lives about 50 minutes away, so this was a major disappointment. So I had to aerate through vigorous splashing and stirring of the wort with the wort chiller. <sigh> Not happy about this.
Okay... Time to pitch. Yeast is spinning away and bubbling with a good 1" of foam on top. Pitched it in the wort, put the top on with a blowoff tube, and set it in the back corner of the garage. Pitched temp was 52 F. The beer is currently at 45.1 F. It's dropped about 7 F since pitching.
It's been about 39 hours, and I see no activity. In fact, the blowoff tube stuck in the growler with distilled water and a dash of StarSan still shows about 1" of water in the tube. The air in the tube doesn't appear to be displacing due to CO2 production.
So, what to do? Do I bring it inside and warm it up? Do I "watch and wait"? Do I open the top of the fermenter and do a gravity check to see if anything is happening?
Being new to lagering, I'm not really sure what to do. I have a lot of thoughts of what may have gone wrong (poor aeration, shocked yeast, etc.), but maybe nothing's wrong.
I'm scatching my bald head. Hmmmmmmmmmm... Curious to hear what other more experienced lager brewers think. Any advice is appreciated!
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