gotbags-10
Well-Known Member
Well that answers my question then. Bottles it is. How long at cellar temps could this beer age? 1,5,10years ?
I wish I could comment on kegging the the Westy 12 but we have never done it. As long as the cellar temps are maintained I see no reason why it would not turn out well. Although I would opt for a stainless dispensing side rather than vinyl or ldpe hose.
Does such a thing exist in an affordable form?
When you crash the secondary to 60 degrees from 80 to get the last couple of gravity points do you do it over one day or do you lower a couple degrees a day?
At 1.016 you're close. In an extended secondary at 68-70F you should be able to drive the gravity down at least another 3 points.
5 days at 68 and its at 1.014 can still taste a little bit of Acetaldehyde. But behind that it wonderful dark fruit. Cant taste the toasted bread I remember from the actual Westy I had in November. It was a year old, does this flavor come through in aging or is this the result of a decoction
Should I warm it back up and re pitch fresh yeast to drive it down some more points, or crash it to 50 for the bulk aging
Secondary should take 6-8 weeks traditionally. No warming should be needed. For added breadiness on the next batch, using decoction and additional Pale will help. Secondary or bottle aging will not normally enhance breadiness. (FMI, is the ale starchy?)
6 to 8 weeks at 60 degrees or 6 to 8 weeks at 50
If the batch is still pushing gravity then 60F. The brightening crash is 50F. Because this ale is so dark, the brightening time can be variable.
I really beed to get a bottling hydrometer its hard to tell over a few points.
I followed the recipe to a T from the first page, next time I may increase the pale or throw a 1/4 pound of melanoidin malt to push the toasted bread flavor and simulate a decoction
We ran a trial in October last year using only Dingeman's Pale. It's much more bready than the import and was well worth the experiment. It's now my favorite variation of this ale. I'd leave the Melanoidin and go all Pale IMHO.
Hmm interesting. All pale malt. What about something like 75%pale 25%pilsner
CSI Looking through the old thread it looks like a lot of people would pitch at 65 and let the yeast rise naturally to 80 and hold the temp until it reached around 80% attenuation. Some said that it hit 80 in 36 hours
Is there a reason why you pitch at 65 and ramp evenly over 7 days till you hit 80. Is the first method susceptible to fusel alcohols. Or does the first method give too much fruity esters not characteristic of a true westy 12
I brewed for the first time this just before Christmas with my brother-in-law, and it's now done with the 2 month aging process at 50F and I'm ready to bottle. I haven't bottled much I went right to kegs so I have a few questions.
I read the great summary of tips on page 3 by Bottoms_up and it seems like I have some options:
I could carb just with corn sugar, but others report using CSI'S D-180 or CSI's Golden (clear) syrup. It seems like 2.5-2.6 volumes in a good target. Also I see I should re-pitch about 75 billion cells for my 5 gallon batch.
Any advice or tips? I just want to make sure I get proper carbonation and don't pooch up this beer which has signs of being spectacular at this very-last step.
Using D-180 is probably the best option, but I went with dextrose so I wouldn't have to store a partly opened package of D-180. I have kegs but decided to bottle, since this is a beer you want to age, and I didn't want to tie up a keg for such a long period. This is the approach I used:
I boiled 1-1/4 cups of water in a small pot. When it came to a boil, I added 172 grams of dextrose (corn sugar) and stirred. Theoretically, this should give 2.8 volumes of CO2 @ 70 F. Let it boil for 10-15 minutes. Then cool it to room temperature and add it to a sanitized fermentation pail. Siphon the beer into the pail.
In the meantime I added about 50 ml of pre-boiled and cooled water to a small sanitized pot and heated it to about 120 F. I took about 50 ml of this and added it to a small sanitized measuring cup (e.g. half liter). When it cooled to about 110 F I sprinkled about 1/4 - 1/2 package of EC-1118 yeast on the surface, covered with sanitized plastic wrap, and let it sit for 15 minutes. Then I stirred the yeast and added it to the beer in the pail, and stirred it very gently.
Then I bottled the beer. Let it bottle condition at room temperature for at least two weeks. Try one (or bottle a few in PET bottles and feel for rock hardness). If not ready, leave for another week. Then store the bottles in a cool environment.
I'm very happy with the resultant amount of pressure in the bottles.
Hey guys,
Question on the long secondary... I brewed a double batch of this back on February 14th, and am itching to get my fermentation chamber back for other brews, the pipeline is running thin!
I am thinking of brewing a couple batches on easter weekend, which would mean bottling this brew after a secondary of 4 weeks at 50f plus the two weeks in primary, so 6 weeks post brew date total.
If I bottle at that point, how much would that affect the outcome, especially since I am planning on letting it sit in bottles another 6 months before even trying it?
Thanks for the input!