Bottled mine today. 3 gal as is. 1 gallon "dry beaned" with coarsely ground coffee for a week and then more cold brewed coffee at bottling and 1 gallon aged with cocoa nibs for 1 week and then coffee extract at bottling.
Bottled mine today. 3 gal as is. 1 gallon "dry beaned" with coarsely ground coffee for a week and then more cold brewed coffee at bottling and 1 gallon aged with cocoa nibs for 1 week and then coffee extract at bottling.
My first batch of this was brewed last Fall, and proceeded strangely. It was allowed to be in the fermenter for a month, after which it registered exactly the 1.014 on the hydrometer that it was supposed to. After a month's conditioning, it was a nice, tasty beer. Starting late in the Winter, probably February, I noticed a tendency for the bottles to foam up when opened, even when cold. This only increased over time. I brought up the last six yesterday, and left it on the table upstairs overnight. When I came down this morning, there were two necks blown off, a bit of stout on the ceiling, and various things wet down. I took the remaining beers outside, put on gloves, and lifted the caps. I got immediate foamout (although not violent) of about 1/3 of the beer.
I'm having a hard time understanding this, because the beer basically showed as fermented out when I bottled it. I used the standard 5 oz. of dextrose boiled in 2 cups of water to prime, bottled in regular commercial non-returnable 9 oz. longnecks (which is what most of my beer is bottled in).
Sounds like a gusher infection.
Hello.... what would be a good dry yeast to use as I'm new to brewing and do not have a stir plate to make a starter? Nottingham or us-04???
thanks!
This is not intended to contradict orangemen5 as he is correct a stir plate is not required. I'm new and have added a variety of equipment in the 8 months I've been brewing. Nothing has been as valuable as the $40 I spent on a stir plate. Unless you are sticking to dry yeast or pitching on yeast cakes....get one.![]()
Hello.... what would be a good dry yeast to use as I'm new to brewing and do not have a stir plate to make a starter? Nottingham or us-04???
Newfiebrew,
If I may make a suggestion, maybe consider Danstar Windsor. Its a british yeast that does leave some flavors behind and doesnt ferment as completly as Nottingham. You will be left with a lil bit more sweetness and body. SO 4 will be similiar, but will fermen a lil bit more out. And then SO5/Nottingham will have the most complete fermentation with no profile in the flavor.
thanks!
I turned this USB fan into a stir plate and used hard drive magnets on the fan. Works great and I've made a gallon starter with no issues. Just make sure to match the stir bar size to the magnet and it will work fine.
I mostly use a 2L flask, but have a tall rubbermaid container with a flat bottom that has a 4L capacity for making larger starters if necessary.
Could someone suggest a good stirplate and what size flask is best? I have read a review on the one at stirstarters.com and some say it struggles with large volume starters (2000ml or higher)???
What did I do wrong?
I brewed this up in June (followed recipe except scaled up to 6gal and a lower efficiency) and have had it on tap for a few weeks now. It tastes AMAZING but has no head whatsoever, and any foam I am able to create by pouring straight down the middle of the glass (which isn't much) fades quickly. What could cause this? Is it just not carbed enough? I've got it set at 12psi right now which is my normal serving pressure. The other beers on tap are fine (one was added much later) and don't have any oats/wheat while this one has 1.3lbs.
I was planning on entering this in my first competition next month (probably still will) so I'm pretty bumbed. Any ideas?
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