Hello.
Sorry if this is a dumb question, but plenty seem to be doing it so I'm going to assume that people have good reasons for it, but ..
When I started home brewing I left beer in the primary as long as I could be bothered based on my schedule without getting problems. This was usually at least 2 weeks, but often longer. My rational was yeast needs time to complete fermentation and clean up after itself and coming from making wine and mead this seemed short. If I was dry hopping I'd rack to secondary and dry hop for 1 - 2 weeks because this is what everybody was doing, wanting to maximise extract from those expensive hops and it made racking easier because the beer would drop almost bright.
When I started working at a commercial brewery everybody looked at me like I'd come from another planet. Ale gets 72 hours in primary then is chilled for whatever is left of the day and night before transfer to a conditioning tank where it gets whatever is left of the day and night then packaging the following day. The exception is when dry hopping where they go into the fermenter at 72 hours and the chilling is done the following day, means dry hopping is 12-24 hours. We package bright looking beer, but some yeast is still in suspension and secondary fermentation can be considered to continue for another two weeks in cask or bottle before release. This isn't a given though because we also batch carbonate under pressure for kegging and these beers will be chilled down, carbonated and packaged within 48 hours.
Discussion on the topic yielded a bunch of historic attenuation graphs, information on diacetyl absorption, information regarding the length of time to extract all the necessary compounds from dry hopping, discussion about pitch rates and some books to go and read. They have a fair points tbh I can't really fault gravity readings which indicate the beer is done, temperature is controlled pretty well, studies do show the yeast does a fairly good job of consuming the minimal diacetyl produced quite rapidly in the latter stage of fermentation and you can't taste faults in the beer, it wins awards and it has been produced this way for a long time based on industry standard practice.
So why as home brewers are we leaving beer in primary so long? Oxygenation doesn't have to be a problem. Pitch rates can be scaled up to match. Most of us aren't bad at temperature control. Studies show dry hops are breaking down after 12 hours.
The biggest eye opener for me was brewing a big beer (1.082) and seeing it done in three days. This was the kind of beer that I would assume I needed to leave in primary for at least a month.
Sorry if this is a dumb question, but plenty seem to be doing it so I'm going to assume that people have good reasons for it, but ..
When I started home brewing I left beer in the primary as long as I could be bothered based on my schedule without getting problems. This was usually at least 2 weeks, but often longer. My rational was yeast needs time to complete fermentation and clean up after itself and coming from making wine and mead this seemed short. If I was dry hopping I'd rack to secondary and dry hop for 1 - 2 weeks because this is what everybody was doing, wanting to maximise extract from those expensive hops and it made racking easier because the beer would drop almost bright.
When I started working at a commercial brewery everybody looked at me like I'd come from another planet. Ale gets 72 hours in primary then is chilled for whatever is left of the day and night before transfer to a conditioning tank where it gets whatever is left of the day and night then packaging the following day. The exception is when dry hopping where they go into the fermenter at 72 hours and the chilling is done the following day, means dry hopping is 12-24 hours. We package bright looking beer, but some yeast is still in suspension and secondary fermentation can be considered to continue for another two weeks in cask or bottle before release. This isn't a given though because we also batch carbonate under pressure for kegging and these beers will be chilled down, carbonated and packaged within 48 hours.
Discussion on the topic yielded a bunch of historic attenuation graphs, information on diacetyl absorption, information regarding the length of time to extract all the necessary compounds from dry hopping, discussion about pitch rates and some books to go and read. They have a fair points tbh I can't really fault gravity readings which indicate the beer is done, temperature is controlled pretty well, studies do show the yeast does a fairly good job of consuming the minimal diacetyl produced quite rapidly in the latter stage of fermentation and you can't taste faults in the beer, it wins awards and it has been produced this way for a long time based on industry standard practice.
So why as home brewers are we leaving beer in primary so long? Oxygenation doesn't have to be a problem. Pitch rates can be scaled up to match. Most of us aren't bad at temperature control. Studies show dry hops are breaking down after 12 hours.
The biggest eye opener for me was brewing a big beer (1.082) and seeing it done in three days. This was the kind of beer that I would assume I needed to leave in primary for at least a month.