Kirkwooder
Emperor of all things nobody cares about
Yes, exactly!You mean Troglodytarum Fororum, right? That would have been my first guess too.
Yes, exactly!You mean Troglodytarum Fororum, right? That would have been my first guess too.
So just so we're all on the same page, you're willing to send a sample off to a lab for evaluation, but not willing to take the most rudimentary home measurement because you, as an engineer mind you, find a hydrometer hard to read?
Yes, I'm sure wild speculation is far more valuable at this point. Nothing about this is suspect at all.
Yes, exactly!
I'll put a hydrometer in it later tonight and get back with a SG reading... I am certain it will be a reading of unfermented oatmeal stout or somewhere there about.
I'll put a hydrometer in it later tonight and get back with a SG reading... I am certain it will be a reading of unfermented oatmeal stout or somewhere there about.
What on earth are you talking about?For those of you who may not understand gravity readings, what the exercise outlined here will tell us is exactly nothing. After admittedly pitching yeast more than 6 months ago, and without a gravity reading at that time, you simply cannot refer to a gravity reading now as "SG."
You know what has a gravity of unfermented oatmeal stout (for those keeping track, 1.045 - 1.065 according to BJCP guidelines)? Three Floyd's Dark Lord (I've heard it reported as 1.047). And since people line up to get it, I'll go ahead and assume that it has fermented.
What on earth are you talking about?
Specific gravity is specific gravity. As long as it's degassed and temp accounted for, a hydrometer will read it.
May not be the *original* gravity. But the gravity can indeed be read.
Dark Lord is far higher than 1.047For those of you who may not understand gravity readings, what the exercise outlined here will tell us is exactly nothing. After admittedly pitching yeast more than 6 months ago, and without a gravity reading at that time, you simply cannot refer to a gravity reading now as "SG."
You know what has a gravity of unfermented oatmeal stout (for those keeping track, 1.045 - 1.065 according to BJCP guidelines)? Three Floyd's Dark Lord (I've heard it reported as 1.047). And since people line up to get it, I'll go ahead and assume that it has fermented.