hydro reading & fermentation time's
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hydro reading & fermentation time's
Could you give me some advice, I did'nt take a hydrometer reading at the start of the brewing procesS, It's been 3 day's should i take a reading now & then on the 7th and next day to see if the reading's are the same??..
And if I leave my lager to ferment more than the 7 day's, would this improve the lager?.
Thank You Sean...
And if I leave my lager to ferment more than the 7 day's, would this improve the lager?.
Thank You Sean...
Last edited by aussie sean on Thursday Sep 06, 2007 12:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
who dare's win's
Hi Sean,
Yeah leave it for 4 days, test the FG and test again the next day. 24 hours I should say......
If it has not moved, you can bottle.
Before taking the test it is always good to get the malt out of the tap, as this will throw out a odd FG. Let the liquid flow fast through tap, tip this out and do another reading.
Cheers
Boonie
Yeah leave it for 4 days, test the FG and test again the next day. 24 hours I should say......
If it has not moved, you can bottle.
Before taking the test it is always good to get the malt out of the tap, as this will throw out a odd FG. Let the liquid flow fast through tap, tip this out and do another reading.
Cheers
Boonie
A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
Give me a flying headbutt.......
You can bottle as soon as you get the same reading 24 hours apart but...
It would be advisable to leave your brew for at least 7 days before bottling, in fact home brew author John Palmer recommends:
Leaving an ale beer in the primary fermentor for a total of 2-3 weeks (instead of just the one week most canned kits recommend), will provide time for the conditioning reactions and improve the beer. This extra time will also let more sediment settle out before bottling, resulting in a clearer beer and easier pouring. And, three weeks in the primary fermentor is usually not enough time for off-flavors to occur.
It would be advisable to leave your brew for at least 7 days before bottling, in fact home brew author John Palmer recommends:
Leaving an ale beer in the primary fermentor for a total of 2-3 weeks (instead of just the one week most canned kits recommend), will provide time for the conditioning reactions and improve the beer. This extra time will also let more sediment settle out before bottling, resulting in a clearer beer and easier pouring. And, three weeks in the primary fermentor is usually not enough time for off-flavors to occur.
"Doc, what can I do about these terrible hangovers?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
That should get things going. And about time, too.It`s been too quiet here lately. Far too bloody quiet.Noodles wrote:You can bottle as soon as you get the same reading 24 hours apart but...
It would be advisable to leave your brew for at least 7 days before bottling, in fact home brew author John Palmer recommends:
Leaving an ale beer in the primary fermentor for a total of 2-3 weeks (instead of just the one week most canned kits recommend), will provide time for the conditioning reactions and improve the beer. This extra time will also let more sediment settle out before bottling, resulting in a clearer beer and easier pouring. And, three weeks in the primary fermentor is usually not enough time for off-flavors to occur.



I didn't realise Palmer was so controversial. Should I be reaching for my flame retardant body suit?ryan wrote:That should get things going. And about time, too.It`s been too quiet here lately. Far too bloody quiet.![]()
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"Doc, what can I do about these terrible hangovers?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
OK, now I understand, do you want me to get it started?
It's a proven fact* that racking does little to improve beer clarity and leaves you open to all types of infection and oxidization.
*fact not actually proven
It's a proven fact* that racking does little to improve beer clarity and leaves you open to all types of infection and oxidization.
*fact not actually proven
"Doc, what can I do about these terrible hangovers?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
Proven facts are only proven as far as the people putting forward the hypothesis. As human being are fallible, we are incapable of knowing whether anything is a true fact, an unproved fact, or a false fact. However, it is a well known fact that the more people you can find to back up your theory, whether or not they know anything about your subject or not, the truer it becomes. If you are able to point to some empirical research, you are well on the way to proven your fact as truer than it was before you did your research. It doesn't matter that you surveyed 200 of the neighbourhood dogs and cats, it is the numbers which are important. As cats and dogs can't speak, you are at liberty to assume their answers would have supported your theorems.
The factuality of your fact also depends on the veracity with which you state your case. The more convinced you appear to the general public, the more proven your fact must be.
So it is a proven fact that racking beer does improve the beer for some brewers, but also a proven fact that racking does nasty things to other brewers beer.
Hope that's now as clear as the trub in the bottom of your fermenter.
The factuality of your fact also depends on the veracity with which you state your case. The more convinced you appear to the general public, the more proven your fact must be.
So it is a proven fact that racking beer does improve the beer for some brewers, but also a proven fact that racking does nasty things to other brewers beer.
Hope that's now as clear as the trub in the bottom of your fermenter.
Last edited by warra48 on Thursday Sep 06, 2007 7:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
But it still does not explain the hidden weapons in Iraq
FWIW, I think it improves my beer
and I get to dry hop at the same time.
Also good if you want to put into a 20L cube to lager, the.... um Lagers in the fridge.
My 6 cents as I think I have done my 2 x 2c on the other "to rack or not to rack" threads
Cheers
Boonie

FWIW, I think it improves my beer

Also good if you want to put into a 20L cube to lager, the.... um Lagers in the fridge.
My 6 cents as I think I have done my 2 x 2c on the other "to rack or not to rack" threads

Cheers
Boonie
A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
Give me a flying headbutt.......
You obviously missed my footnote warra.warra48 wrote:Proven facts are only proven as far as the people putting forward the hypothesis. As human being are fallible, we are incapable of knowing whether anything is a true fact, an unproved fact, or a false fact. However, it is a well known fact that the more people you can find to back up your theory, whether or not they know anything about your subject or not, the truer it becomes. If you are able to point to some empirical research, you are well on the way to proven your fact as truer than it was before you did your research. It doesn't matter that you surveyed 200 of the neighbourhood dogs and cats, it is the numbers which are important. As cats and dogs can't speak, you are at liberty to assume their answers would have supported your theorems.
The factuality of your fact also depends on the veracity with which you state your case. The more convinced you appear to the general public, the more proven your fact must be.
So it is a proven fact that racking beer does improve the beer for some brewers, but also a proven fact that racking does nasty things to other brewers beer.
Hope that's now as clear as the trub in the bottom of your fermenter.
"Doc, what can I do about these terrible hangovers?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
'You can stop drinking beer'
"No, seriously Doc, what can I do?"
I think racking to a secondary help improve the beer too. I did my first lager recently. I rackeded to a secondary before storing in the fridge at 3 degrees for 3 weeks. I was amazed at the yeast cake that formed in the secondary. It was a big as in the primary. The beer that I bottled was very clear and the taste test was awsome.
I was actually worried it would have enough yeast left to carbonate in the bottles.
I was actually worried it would have enough yeast left to carbonate in the bottles.
Who ever said nothing was impossible, never tried to slam a revolving door....