Hey
I'm really keen to brew a stout, but since its winter it gets too cold out in the shed where I normally ferment. Inside the house the temperature sits at around 18C but drops down to about 16C in the night. Would this have any negative effect on the beer or just prolonge the fermentation process?
I'm guessing if the temperature gets down to 15 or 16C it ceases fermentation, but will start again when it gets back up to 18, is this correct? Or am I risking it stopping and not starting again if the temperature gets too low?
Thanks.
Brewing ale at 16-18C?
It depends on what yeast you are using, but if you are using a good quality ale yeast, especially most liquid yeasts, 16-18 degrees will see a very clean fermentation and probably an excellent beer. I ferment almost all my ales in this range unless I'm going for some real 'fruitiness' in a British ale etc...
Good luck,
Shawn.
Good luck,
Shawn.
Have you tried heating up and coolin 20 odd litres of fluid? Any idea how long it takes? I'd suggest given the temperature variation, the wort itself should stay 'reasonably' constant and somewhere in between the two extremes.
I've just made up a pilsner and put it in the garden shed today (I usually brew inside). The shed's at 17-18 deg during the day and I know it get's a heap cooler than that at night this time of year. So I'm expecting the wort to hover around the 12-15 deg mark.
I've just made up a pilsner and put it in the garden shed today (I usually brew inside). The shed's at 17-18 deg during the day and I know it get's a heap cooler than that at night this time of year. So I'm expecting the wort to hover around the 12-15 deg mark.