jrgtr42
Well-Known Member
Personally the only time I use a secondary is if I need to bulk age it, like an imperial stout on wood or brewing a sour where it needs to sit for a long time to develop- mine are a year from grain to bottle.
If you go back to looking at alternatives, this (from #114 in What does a secondary fermenter do? (link)) may be of interest.If the result seems lacking (after three or four months in the bottle) I'll try again and use a secondary.
You have to understand that [author of reply, not me] [is] a walking time capsule. I quit doing any type of brewing research in 2009. I’ve still brewed 200+ gallons a year since, but using the standard, accepted practices of that era. I got back online 2 weeks ago [Sept 2021] and learned that I was making crappy beer because I use a secondary, don’t purge with co2, yadda, yadda, yadda. I’d be willing to bet most people regurgitating all of this oxygenating stuff have never experienced oxidation, and are just repeating what they have learned as if it was settled science.
The standard theory of 12 years ago was that when you transferred to the secondary, you would get some minimal contact with air, but you keep the output end of the siphon in the beer to minimize splashing. There is some dissolved co2 that gets released during the transfer that blankets the beer. If you aren’t dry hopping, you make sure that your batch is big enough to fill into the neck of the carboy. You are then left with a few cubic inches of air space that will be filled with co2 as fermentation completes.
But anytime I read about oxidation not actually being a thing, or the words "CO2 blanket" it sure makes it hard to pay attention to anything else that person writes.
You have to understand that [author of reply, not me] [is] a walking time capsule. I quit doing any type of brewing research in 2009. I’ve still brewed 200+ gallons a year since, but using the standard, accepted practices of that era. I got back online 2 weeks ago [Sept 2021] and learned that I was making crappy beer because I use a secondary, don’t purge with co2, yadda, yadda, yadda. I’d be willing to bet most people regurgitating all of this oxygenating stuff have never experienced oxidation, and are just repeating what they have learned as if it was settled science.
The standard theory of 12 years ago was that when you transferred to the secondary, you would get some minimal contact with air, but you keep the output end of the siphon in the beer to minimize splashing. [...] If you aren’t dry hopping, you make sure that your batch is big enough to fill into the neck of the carboy. You are then left with a few cubic inches of air space that will be filled with co2 as fermentation completes.
Try reading this:
I did, and was primarily replying to it - "oxygenating stuff", "CO2... blankets the beer". The first is real, the second is not, certainly from my experience and most others. Certainly not all, but much or most, of what we all do today is based on reality.
... there is a concept that was also used when bottling NEIPAs that stay fresh in the the bottle a long time.make sure that your batch is big enough to fill into the neck of the carboy. You are then left with a few cubic inches of air space that will be filled with co2 as fermentation completes.
FWIW, In this section ...
... there is a concept that was also used when bottling NEIPAs that stay fresh in the the bottle a long time.
Agreed to fill up bottles, yes. Doing it with carboys may be less realistic but I guess if you plan ahead you might stuff a 6.5 gallon brew into a 5 gallon carboy. Sorry I was commenting on all the rest. This part I agree is a good practice if you can get it done.
Keep in mind that I got my science degree from a vending machine at Walmart, but I've seen this suggestion several times, and it does not seem logical. Say, for argument, that you have a cubic foot of space in the top of your carboy, under an airlock. There is a mixture of air in it; oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, etc. The only gas that is being replicated is carbon dioxide, as the still working yeast produce it. The carbon dioxide is expressed at the top of the wort, increasing the percentage of carbon dioxide in the headspace. The increased gas pushes upward, and expels an equal amount of gas out of the airlock. There are no air currents or disturbances in the carboy to mix the "air" with the pure carbon dioxide, so it stands to reason that eventually, all of the oxygen, nitrogen, etc., will be lifted up and expelled from the fermenter, leaving only carbon dioxide, as long as the yeast keeps working."oxygenating stuff", "CO2... blankets the beer". The first is real, the second is not
Everyone tastes beer differently (The New IPA, chapter 5, first couple of paragraphs). Anecdotally, some people appear to be very sensitive to the off flavors that come from autolysis (see the various strong opinions in Homebrew All-Stars).I'm firmly [of the opinion that] autolysis [is not] a concern on the homebrewing scale
I'm not going to argue about whether co2 blankets exists or not, I'm too uneducated about it, but in my mind comparing the environment in a fermenter and open air is a bit wrong. I'm thinking of climate, wind etc.If CO2 blankets were real, we'd all be living on mountain tops so we wouldn't suffocate. CO2 will be more prevalent for some tiny amount of distance if it's actively coming out of the beer while it's fermenting. But it mixes, uniformly, after a short time, with whatever is int he headspace above it. Even if it's not actively stirred up. Including any oxygen if present. Oxygen is eventually pushed out not because it's lighter and sits on top, but because it's part of the mixture coming out and eventually it's simply diluted to the point it doesn't matter any more.
I'm too uneducated about it.
Sorry, but that expresses far too much ignorance about atmospheric processes which mix air. E.g. pressure differences, low to high, governed by differential temperatures. Like wind? Were it not for these processes your reasoning might hold true and life on Earth would never have evolved.If CO2 blankets were real, we'd all be living on mountain tops so we wouldn't suffocate. CO2 will be more prevalent for some tiny amount of distance if it's actively coming out of the beer while it's fermenting. But it mixes, uniformly, after a short time, with whatever is int he headspace above it. Even if it's not actively stirred up. Including any oxygen if present. Oxygen is eventually pushed out not because it's lighter and sits on top, but because it's part of the mixture coming out and eventually it's simply diluted to the point it doesn't matter any more.
Does that square border represent the wall (barrier) of an FV? Just asking for a friend.Ideally one wants more of the beer friendly blue dots (CO2) than the beer hating red dots (O2).![]()
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Were it not for these processes your reasoning might hold true and life on Earth would never have evolved.
If CO2 blankets were real, we'd all be living on mountain tops so we wouldn't suffocate.
It appears we are saying the same thing.
Artificial order, textbook models and vacuums that only exist in minds. Nature is disorder and chaos, in reality. And we‘re products of it, struggling to understand artificial orderWhat do you not agree with?
There are no valid comparisons between your model and the real world, be it on top of a mountain or inside a fermenter.OK, 'cause your earlier post made no sense. That if it weren't for wind, maybe my proposal of gasses mixing on their own could actually be real. Or something. So, anyhow, you're a firm believer in CO2 blankets? I think. Even while you say at the same time there's disorder and chaos in reality, and that having no headpsace or purging it is a good idea.
OK, I guess. I can move on.
Sorry, but that expresses far too much ignorance
exist in minds
your model
I haven't refuted anything. Just pointed out how it doesn't work as you imagine, in the real world. One of the reasons I try to avoid active volcanic craters. The blanket of toxic gases. Ditto smogs and other air pollution events, which tend to linger in calm (FV like) conditions, especially in the city, where high levels of pollution get generated then trapped for hours, days or even weeks.You have an interesting mind, I think. You keep refuting that gasses mix, then go on to describe why gasses certainly mix. I'm not trying to win here, I'm just trying to figure you out. Gas mixing has been well established for perhaps hundreds of years, a long time anyhow. It's not my model, nor ignorant. I think you maintain a CO2 blanket is real, and at the same time say that gasses go nuts and mix like crazy even inside fermenters.
Sorry to everyone else, I'm just curious to figure this out. If it should be deleted I certainly understand.
Brewing under rules of democracy? Interesting.
There are definitely occasions when a secondary is useful, or even required, if you can be bothered and you have the basic skills required to prevent oxidation during transfer. E.g., if you need the beer to be ready sooner, which is why commercial breweries often use settling tanks after fermentation is done; and, ironically, why home brewers get so excited about conicals, which become secondaries once the yeast cone gets dumped. And long-term ageing of big beers, of course. The idea green beer is fine sitting on the yeast for weeks or longer is not always true. It assumes the yeast are healthy. In some cases high levels of yeast autolysis risk transforming beer into drain water.