Hi Guys,
Been brewing my own beer for a few years now. But run into a weird problem lately that I cant figure out.
The yeast will be very active within 8 hours of pitching but stops suddenly about 24-36 hours later. I leave it sit for a full 5-7 days but it never starts up again.
Ive lost my last 5 batches due to this problem.
All but 1 were during the winter months (Canada) so I thought maybe the cold was the problem. I do have a fermentation chamber made of rigid pink foam and a heating belt run by a STC-1000 controller. I thought the belt might be getting old and having trouble keeping up so I moved the chamber to my living room. Didnt fix it. Then I thought maybe the yeast needed a bit of a boost to start, so I tried a yeast starter. Nope didnt fix it. My last thought was the city water, but that is what Ive been using for years with no problem. This last batch was definitely at 22-24 degC the whole 36 hours. I shook the carboy vigorously to get lots of oxygen in there. Fresh packet of yeast. It went great for 36 hours and then just stopped.
My brew process.
I brew 1 gallon batches.
Bring 7 liters to boil and boil for 10 min
0.900kg 2 row Pale malt and 0.100kg Crystal Malt in a bag in another pot
Pour in 5 liters at 93 degC
Cover and let sit for 60min
Temp drops to 72 degC
Pour out 4 Liters wort back into boil pot
Pour in 1 liter of 100degC water through grains and into boil pot
Wort, 5 liters, 1.026, temp adjust to 1.041, about 68% efficiency
Add 7 grams Hallertau hops and bring wort to boil
Add 4 grams hops at 50 min
Wort boiled for one hour total
Immersion chill down to 22 deg C in 6 min
Add 5-6 grams of Safale US-05
Shake one gallon carboy vigorously
Place into fermentation chamber at 22 degC
I dont understand why the yeast is stopping suddenly. Ive been using the same process for over two years now. I have no idea why the last few batches have just stopped. I even did an extra good job of cleaning and sanitizing this time but nope no difference (I didnt think it was contamination).
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Been brewing my own beer for a few years now. But run into a weird problem lately that I cant figure out.
The yeast will be very active within 8 hours of pitching but stops suddenly about 24-36 hours later. I leave it sit for a full 5-7 days but it never starts up again.
Ive lost my last 5 batches due to this problem.
All but 1 were during the winter months (Canada) so I thought maybe the cold was the problem. I do have a fermentation chamber made of rigid pink foam and a heating belt run by a STC-1000 controller. I thought the belt might be getting old and having trouble keeping up so I moved the chamber to my living room. Didnt fix it. Then I thought maybe the yeast needed a bit of a boost to start, so I tried a yeast starter. Nope didnt fix it. My last thought was the city water, but that is what Ive been using for years with no problem. This last batch was definitely at 22-24 degC the whole 36 hours. I shook the carboy vigorously to get lots of oxygen in there. Fresh packet of yeast. It went great for 36 hours and then just stopped.
My brew process.
I brew 1 gallon batches.
Bring 7 liters to boil and boil for 10 min
0.900kg 2 row Pale malt and 0.100kg Crystal Malt in a bag in another pot
Pour in 5 liters at 93 degC
Cover and let sit for 60min
Temp drops to 72 degC
Pour out 4 Liters wort back into boil pot
Pour in 1 liter of 100degC water through grains and into boil pot
Wort, 5 liters, 1.026, temp adjust to 1.041, about 68% efficiency
Add 7 grams Hallertau hops and bring wort to boil
Add 4 grams hops at 50 min
Wort boiled for one hour total
Immersion chill down to 22 deg C in 6 min
Add 5-6 grams of Safale US-05
Shake one gallon carboy vigorously
Place into fermentation chamber at 22 degC
I dont understand why the yeast is stopping suddenly. Ive been using the same process for over two years now. I have no idea why the last few batches have just stopped. I even did an extra good job of cleaning and sanitizing this time but nope no difference (I didnt think it was contamination).
Any ideas would be appreciated.