Did you post that the the HBT stogie thread?
A quick sample of my stuck toasted coconut stout. Or right now it is just a stout and water.
I re-pitched again, US-05, added 33 g of Calcium Carbonate to hopefully increase the chances of the yeast surviving. 1.067 to 1.030 is not what I wanted. I guess if it doesn't move I can still rack to secondary over coconut, bottle it and just it a low gravity stout, right? I mean, it's not ruined. I did a taste test with chalk. 8 oz sample with a gram of chalk seemed odd. I used less than 1/2 gram to approximately 512 ounces of beer. I gave way for trub and such.
Anyway, I am crossing my fingers. I hugged the bucket, patted it on it's top and said goodnight.![]()
My farts smell extra bad today
Thank you for that. My day is complete.![]()
My farts smell extra bad today
Have you tried nutrient or energiser?
Hello said:In short, it is believed that my recipe had too many grains that created a highly acidic stout. It's an extract recipe with most of the specialty grains that are acidic (dark mostly). So yeast nutrient wouldn't work and they said not to bother with energizer. I brewed this on 10/12. Anyway, the chalk should help with the pH. If it doesn't then I need to either just accept it or dump it. I don't think it's a dumper. My calculations said 36.5 g of chalk, I went with 33 g just in case I was wrong about the total amount of liquid.
Drinking more water.
In short, it is believed that my recipe had too many grains that created a highly acidic stout. It's an extract recipe with most of the specialty grains that are acidic (dark mostly). So yeast nutrient wouldn't work and they said not to bother with energizer. I brewed this on 10/12. Anyway, the chalk should help with the pH. If it doesn't then I need to either just accept it or dump it. I don't think it's a dumper. My calculations said 36.5 g of chalk, I went with 33 g just in case I was wrong about the total amount of liquid.
Drinking more water.
It may be more of an effort then you want, but if you make a starter and build it up by adding small amounts of the stout and pitch it that should do the trick! I had the same problem with a stout extract and specialty grain recipe. Though I just racked it into a secondary on top of cocoa nibs and left it for a month.Hello said:In short, it is believed that my recipe had too many grains that created a highly acidic stout. It's an extract recipe with most of the specialty grains that are acidic (dark mostly). So yeast nutrient wouldn't work and they said not to bother with energizer. I brewed this on 10/12. Anyway, the chalk should help with the pH. If it doesn't then I need to either just accept it or dump it. I don't think it's a dumper. My calculations said 36.5 g of chalk, I went with 33 g just in case I was wrong about the total amount of liquid. Drinking more water.
Having a glass of coconut rum with cranberry
speeddemon190 said:I never thought about trying that...sounds delicious, I might have to hit the liquor store on the way home from work tonight
It's like candy.
Tastes better with pineapple juice.
Remmy said:It's like candy.
Tastes better with pineapple juice.
I was given the choice between the chalk and the baking soda but I did boil water, mix the chalk up as well as I could then pitched that and yeast and did a little swirl.I've never used chalk, but I've heard that it is really, really hard to dissolve so the case might be that a large portion of the chalk you added didn't even make it into solution. I would look into alternative means of increasing pH, such as baking soda.
I could do that. I think now that with adding chalk and re-pitching, I will likely not do anything more. Eventually I am going to take a beer that seems to taste good (though a bit green) and foc it all up. Right now I feel like I can at least pretend it was all okay and I didn't really intend for it to hit FG below 1.030.It may be more of an effort then you want, but if you make a starter and build it up by adding small amounts of the stout and pitch it that should do the trick! I had the same problem with a stout extract and specialty grain recipe. Though I just racked it into a secondary on top of cocoa nibs and left it for a month.
speeddemon190 said:have you tried it with coke? wonder how that would taste
speeddemon190 said:have you tried it with coke? wonder how that would taste
LotM b2, finally rebrewing BdC.
LotM b3 was dry hopped Friday late and will probably get bottled later this week.
Cool picture.
I'm trying to figure out what I'm making for supper tonight so I can hit the store before heading home.
My sister texted me and said she wants to brew a batch of stout to fill my whiskey barrel. Ambitious of her, I don't think she's ever made more than a 10 gallon batch. 36 gallons is a lot of beer. I'll have to go over recipes with her tonight.
Drinking an iced coff.
Thanks. Installed the Pixlr Express App Nuke mentioned.
36 gallons ain't scheet when you got Blingmann!
Got the vanilla stout bottled, including a liter in a Tired Hands growler, cold crashing more brett to send out, and now have 9 cases of beer in the 'warm room' aka bedroom closet. Good beer day here!
Also put myself down for 20 gallons of fresh pressed cider for this Sunday. New cidery (is that the right term?) in Asheville is hosting the homebrew club there for pressing. I've been meaning to join as $20 comes with a lot of cool events like this one where the first 5 gallons is on the club for members. Should be $1-$1.50 a gallon after that. Doing 6 gallons wild, 4 are going in the fridge to drink, and then doing two 5 gallon batches for a friend with Celiac's. Probably splitting those between an English ale yeast and some other clean strain. First time making cider, should be fun