You can confirm me for this one as well. I'm not gonna be able to brew until the end of this month though, all my fermenters will be tied up until then.
On a side note......anyone in the San Diego are know of a place that sells the DAP yeast nutrient? I couldn't find any at Ralph's or Von's.
My second question has to do with pitching rates. The Mr. Malty pitching rate calculator says I need about a 2 liter starter with 2 smack packs. I only have one smack pack and was just going to step it up once. How do I calculate the volume of the first and second steps? I'd like to slightly underpitch, in order to bring out more of the yeast characteristics, but not underpitch by so much that attenuation suffers. Thanks!
I'm cooking up my candi syrup right now. It's actually kind of fun. Anyway, I'll be brewing next week and had a couple questions. First, what does brew like a monk have to say about whirlfloc or irish moss or stuff like that. I always use whirlfloc but for this beer I'm considering not. Firstly, it will be so dark I doubt it would make a difference in clarity, secondly, there will be yeast in the bottle anyway to cloud it, and lastly, I always feel like it reduces head retention when I use it. Anyway, thats question one.
My second question has to do with pitching rates. The Mr. Malty pitching rate calculator says I need about a 2 liter starter with 2 smack packs. I only have one smack pack and was just going to step it up once. How do I calculate the volume of the first and second steps? I'd like to slightly underpitch, in order to bring out more of the yeast characteristics, but not underpitch by so much that attenuation suffers. Thanks!
The monks don't use any whirflock, the 10 week "lagering" phase @ 50f clears out the beer. They say they lose an average of 8% of the beer due to this fining process. I'm not putting any whirflock in.
For MrMalty, first off make sure your beer stats are in (OG @ volume) and then set the slider is all the way over to the right, that assumes one smack pack/vial.
Also be sure to check how you are making your starter (simple starter, w/o2, continuous aeration, shaken, stir plate).
Your starter is going to want about 48 hours before its totally done. Without a stir plate you are going to need a BIG starter, like 6 liters if just shaking. A stir plate goes a long way towards making good beer!
Don't get me wrong, I've made plenty of starters, and use the Mr. Malty calculator for every one. I was just inquiring about how best to calculate the step-up. With the slider all the way to the right, it was still calling for 2 packs.
EDIT: Billions, not millions I mean.
Well, you were doing an 11.5g batch and I was doing a 5.5g batchIf you change the volume the vial count does decrease from 2 to 1. Can't wait to try this beer, its going to be a long 13 weeks.
My batch is 5.5 gal too. If you fill out the Mr. Malty Yeast calculator with 1.090 OG, 5.5 gal. batch, and yeast manufacture date of April 7, 2009 with the slider all the way to the right and use a stir plate, it says to use 2 vials of yeast in a little over 2 liters. I just hope that the recommended rate isn't going to be too much, so that the yeast doesn't produce all the neat flavors and aromas it should. At least it should attenuate completely. I'm planning on mashing at 148 for 90 minutes. Hope I don't go down past 1.011!
So I decided to take a gravity reading and see where I'm at. Seemed a little early but since we need to start cooling before we reach terminal gravity. Turns out it was a good idea for me to check because my SG was 1.019 which is about 78% apparent attenuation! Cranked the temp down to 63f so I should hit 65f beer temp sometime tomorrow for its last 4 days of fermentation.
Hope that doesn't shock the yeast and get them to quit fermenting!
It will get there by itself, a lot faster than 3 degrees a day too.I'm going to let the yeast get rockin at 67 then in 36-48 hours I'll add my sugars and set my temp controller to only cool to 82. I don't think the temp will climb all the way up by itself so I might ramp the temp up 2-3 degrees a day
It will get there by itself, a lot faster than 3 degrees a day too.