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maryp

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May 14, 2006
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Location
Minnesota
Hi folks --

I'm hoping one of you experienced brewers can solve a puzzle for me!

I've had a Belgian golden ale in my secondary fermentation carboy for a long time now, about 6-8 weeks. I'd be quite happy to bottle it, but it just keeps on fermenting! I'm getting a bubble through the airlock about every 20 seconds or so, and I'm afraid I'd get exploding bottles if I bottle it now.

This is a recipe with a lot of fermentables, but still this seems like an awfully long time for a beer to ferment! It's been at a temp of about 60-70 degrees the whole time.

Any ideas what might be going on?? Should I just be patient?

Many thanks for your help

:)
 
This is precisely the kind of situation where a hydrometer comes in handy. If the readings are consistent over three days, go ahead a bottle, otherwise wait it out.

Of course if you do not have a hydrometer, and refuse to get one, your beer wont be any worse for sitting in the secondary for a while longer.

- magno
 
Thanks for the hint, magno! I don't know anything about hydrometers (they measure specific gravity, right?) but am quite happy to get one if it'll help with beer diagnosis.

Has anyone ever seen a beer ferment this slowly before? I'm concerned that some other process is going on -- can't believe there's still fermentable suger in there!

Thanks again,

Mary P.

magno said:
This is precisely the kind of situation where a hydrometer comes in handy. If the readings are consistent over three days, go ahead a bottle, otherwise wait it out.

Of course if you do not have a hydrometer, and refuse to get one, your beer wont be any worse for sitting in the secondary for a while longer.

- magno
 
How long did your Belgain ale sit in the primary? If you waited for the bubbles to slow to 1 bubble per minute before transfering to the secondary then i dont see why for the super long fermentation.... Did you happen to syphon a lot of the yeast cake from the primary into the secondary.... that is the only thing I can think of that would cause such a long fermentation, the yeast gets agitated and starts eating again. I'd relax, wait it out, have a homebrew.:mug:
 
Well, it's been long enough now that I don't quite remember how long the beer was in primary -- a good couple of weeks, I'd think. I usually wait for it to ferment out pretty thoroughly.

Maybe you're right and I did get some agitated yeast in the fermenter! I'll try to be patient -- there's a nice Belgian triple in the fridge that should help with that. :D

Thanks for your advice!

Mary P.

sub1427 said:
How long did your Belgain ale sit in the primary? If you waited for the bubbles to slow to 1 bubble per minute before transfering to the secondary then i dont see why for the super long fermentation.... Did you happen to syphon a lot of the yeast cake from the primary into the secondary.... that is the only thing I can think of that would cause such a long fermentation, the yeast gets agitated and starts eating again. I'd relax, wait it out, have a homebrew.:mug:
 
maryp said:
I don't know anything about hydrometers (they measure specific gravity, right?) but am quite happy to get one if it'll help with beer diagnosis.

Has anyone ever seen a beer ferment this slowly before? I'm concerned that some other process is going on -- can't believe there's still fermentable suger in there!

Hydrometers are used to measure specific gravity. With the original and final gravities (OG and FG) you can determine the alcohol content. In a situation like yours, you can take two readings spaced three days apart; if the readings are the same, the beer is done.

Hydrometers are convienient but not essential to making good beer.

None of my beers have femented for that long, but I wouldnt think that there would be much fermentable sugar left either.

If you post the recipe, I can put it through ProMash and get a rough OG.

- magno
 
maryp said:
Has anyone ever seen a beer ferment this slowly before? I'm concerned that some other process is going on -- can't believe there's still fermentable suger in there!

There are plenty of sugars that would take a very long time to ferment out. Honey, maple syrup, malasis to name a few. If it smells good and is still fermenting.... well one thing is for sure.... it's going to be REAL good when it's done. Ignore it for a bit longer:) It's clearly fermenting so it certainly wont hurt.
 
How interesting! This receipe does have a bunch of Belgian candi sugar in it (as I guess lots of Belgian beers do); maybe that accounts for the long fermentation time.

I suppose I'll just be patient!

Thanks for the advice,

Mary P.

Beer Snob said:
There are plenty of sugars that would take a very long time to ferment out. Honey, maple syrup, malasis to name a few. If it smells good and is still fermenting.... well one thing is for sure.... it's going to be REAL good when it's done. Ignore it for a bit longer:) It's clearly fermenting so it certainly wont hurt.
 
I agree with the use of a hydrometer, not a necessity, but ...:D

It also allows you to gage when your brew is done based upon the OG/FG and indicates whether your brew is within the range for the (brews) style or not.:D
 
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