MaryB
Well-Known Member
I have pushed Notty to 5 days then bottle. It was at FG for that recipe. Tasted the same as letting it sit 2 weeks...
And here I was sitting on it for 336 hours, like a sap!I'm getting old. It takes me half a month.
If it was at 61 degrees then it was right where it should be temp wise. Go any cooler and you risk off flavors. Notty just rages like that, you weren't doing anything wrong. You brewed a pretty big beer and it's putting in WORK! Sometimes you just have to use a blowoff with it. The reason it's one of my favorite yeasts is just how fast it is. You can turn over beers fast.
But with 61 degrees ambient, simultaneous with 120+ bubbles per minute, it could have been as high as perhaps 71 degrees inside the fermenter at its peak. I've heard stories of Notty heating up a fermenter by as much as 10 degrees F. when its really cranking. Since all I can do at present is measure the surrounding air temperature, I'll certainly never know the internal temperature peak for this batch.
Latest update: ~70.5 hours post pitch and it has settled down to a leisurely 72 bubbles per minute. Definitely past peak now. Current ambient temp is 61 degrees. Next plan is to add dry hops tomorrow morning.
Let the beer have enough time that the bubbles slow way down so you don't lose the hop aroma through the airlock. Your beer can wait a couple weeks before you dry hop it with no ill effects.:rockin:
I'm going commando with nearly 3 ounces of pellet hops (Amarillo, Citra, and Mosaic). Shouldn't they be added early enough to benefit from some potential mixing action via the yeast?
Hops mixing with yeast?
I've been brewing with those 3 hops a lot lately it will be a fruit bomb!! With alcohol!
This is my first American IPA (almost a DIPA) and I'm wondering how long they typically need to age after bottling in order to reach peak flavor.
I've been brewing with those 3 hops a lot lately it will be a fruit bomb!! With alcohol!
I'm going commando with nearly 3 ounces of pellet hops (Amarillo, Citra, and Mosaic). Shouldn't they be added early enough to benefit from some potential mixing action via the yeast?
Oh, yes, that's rather cold for Notty. Not too cold, mind you, but at the lower end of the range. Cold enough to slow it down.I made my cream ale this weekend. It's the cream of three crops all grain recipe I found on this forum. I pitched some of the notty I harvested from the batch I made this thread about. It was about 1/2 a quart of thick slurry after I decanted the older beer off the top of the yeast. It should have been a massive overpitch according to the mr malty yeast calculator, but this one didn't take off quite as fast.
At about 24 hours post pitch there was definite activity and about 1 inch of krausen, but it wasn't rolling like the last batch. I checked this morning and it was fully churning though. So call it 36 hours to full fermentation activity.
There are a number of variables that could affect this one. It's my first all grain, so I have no idea how fermentable it is compared to the previous extract batches. I'm fermenting at 59-60 degrees to see how much of a difference that makes in the final product. And of course I pitched slurry instead of dry yeast.
I'm in no hurry for this batch to finish though. With the increased amount of time and effort involved in all grain brewing I want nothing but the best conditions for it. I must say I'm extremely excited to see how it comes out though.
Not concerned. Just impressed.Why is everyone so concerned with how fast a yeast works? I pitch the proper amounts of yeast at the proper temperature. Even using the same yeast in different brews I get different results. Sometimes it starts quick and ends quick, sometimes it lags and ends quick, sometimes it starts quick and takes a long time and sometimes it lags and takes a long time......
In the end it is whether the beer is good. If everything else was good, I have noticed no real difference in how fast or slow the yeast does it's thing.
I mean, I guess if you're brewing a hop-head IPA, faster is better. Rush those fresh alphas to the glass while they're new. Not that I do a lot of IPAs, but in that case I can see the virtue in speed.Why is everyone so concerned with how fast a yeast works? I pitch the proper amounts of yeast at the proper temperature. Even using the same yeast in different brews I get different results. Sometimes it starts quick and ends quick, sometimes it lags and ends quick, sometimes it starts quick and takes a long time and sometimes it lags and takes a long time......
In the end it is whether the beer is good. If everything else was good, I have noticed no real difference in how fast or slow the yeast does it's thing.
I mean, I guess if you're brewing a hop-head IPA, faster is better. Rush those fresh alphas to the glass while they're new. Not that I do a lot of IPAs, but in that case I can see the virtue in speed.
Yeah, like I said, speed doesn't mean all that much to me. I make a lot of dark beers, so I like to give mine time in the carboy to bulk condition anyway. I leave my beers in primary for at least three weeks, usually a month, sometimes six weeks before bottling or racking.Impressed that Nottingham is fast.. OK, but that really doesn't mean anything.
Even fastest to slowest fermentations is usually only a few days. So I don't think it would be an issue even with a hop-head IPA, especially since a lot of the hops are after fermentation.
As I said in my first reply. I have used Nottingham several times. Sometimes it seems fast and other times not so much.
Then again, I put my beers in my fermentation chamber, open it the next day to see if it is going, once it is I don't check again on it until day 14 when I am looking to package it.
Yeah, like I said, speed doesn't mean all that much to me. I make a lot of dark beers, so I like to give mine time in the carboy to bulk condition anyway. I leave my beers in primary for at least three weeks, usually a month, sometimes six weeks before bottling or racking.
So yeah, for me the only thing I value about a speedy fermentation is sitting and watching the yeast churn to the point where you can see all the particulate flying around in the carboy. It's hypnotic.
Why is everyone so concerned with how fast a yeast works? I pitch the proper amounts of yeast at the proper temperature. Even using the same yeast in different brews I get different results. Sometimes it starts quick and ends quick, sometimes it lags and ends quick, sometimes it starts quick and takes a long time and sometimes it lags and takes a long time......
In the end it is whether the beer is good. If everything else was good, I have noticed no real difference in how fast or slow the yeast does it's thing.
Why is everyone so concerned with how fast a yeast works? I pitch the proper amounts of yeast at the proper temperature. Even using the same yeast in different brews I get different results. Sometimes it starts quick and ends quick, sometimes it lags and ends quick, sometimes it starts quick and takes a long time and sometimes it lags and takes a long time......
In the end it is whether the beer is good. If everything else was good, I have noticed no real difference in how fast or slow the yeast does it's thing.
With 10 friends drinking my beer I occasionally have to push a batch to done in 10 days or less!
With 10 friends drinking my beer I occasionally have to push a batch to done in 10 days or less!