Hello. I have a question.
Some months ago i did a dubbel and a tripe. I used 8.5 grams of priming sugar per liter of beer, and both came under-carbonated, especially the dubbel (even if i used same amount of priming sugar for both), the yeast was a liquid yeast that was almost expired, but i did a starter (1.25 pitching rate). So i think 8.5grams / liter is enough for the belgian beers, so in that case, it could be from the yeast ? (because it was old, or too less and too stressed?) Before i did many beers with dried yeast and i had no problem. If i'm looking at the bottom of the bottle, it seems very few yeast, in the past with the dried yeast, it was a lot of yeast on the bottom.
Next days i'm planing in doing an Imperial IPA, Imperial Stout and a Quadrupel, all 3 beers will stay in a secondary too (7-10 days, the ipa for dry-hopping, the quad and IS to stay with wood chips), in that case some of the yeast will be also lost, i'm afraid that they will finish also under-carbonated. I will use the same yeast as for the dubbel and trippel, which is wyeast 1762, but this time i hope to be fresher. For the Imperial IPA im going to use dried Safale US-05, but still is going to stay in a secondary for 7-10 days. Should i add some dried yeast after secondary ? How much, when and which yeast (dried) if yes ? I'm brewing 9.5 liters of each batch (which is about 2.5 gallons). Or it will help if i add more priming sugar (9-9.5 grams per liter) ?
* its first time when im going to do a secondary
Thanks !
Some months ago i did a dubbel and a tripe. I used 8.5 grams of priming sugar per liter of beer, and both came under-carbonated, especially the dubbel (even if i used same amount of priming sugar for both), the yeast was a liquid yeast that was almost expired, but i did a starter (1.25 pitching rate). So i think 8.5grams / liter is enough for the belgian beers, so in that case, it could be from the yeast ? (because it was old, or too less and too stressed?) Before i did many beers with dried yeast and i had no problem. If i'm looking at the bottom of the bottle, it seems very few yeast, in the past with the dried yeast, it was a lot of yeast on the bottom.
Next days i'm planing in doing an Imperial IPA, Imperial Stout and a Quadrupel, all 3 beers will stay in a secondary too (7-10 days, the ipa for dry-hopping, the quad and IS to stay with wood chips), in that case some of the yeast will be also lost, i'm afraid that they will finish also under-carbonated. I will use the same yeast as for the dubbel and trippel, which is wyeast 1762, but this time i hope to be fresher. For the Imperial IPA im going to use dried Safale US-05, but still is going to stay in a secondary for 7-10 days. Should i add some dried yeast after secondary ? How much, when and which yeast (dried) if yes ? I'm brewing 9.5 liters of each batch (which is about 2.5 gallons). Or it will help if i add more priming sugar (9-9.5 grams per liter) ?
* its first time when im going to do a secondary
Thanks !