3 days
3 days
My local HBS owner reckons three days in the primary only for all the beers I brew. This guy is very well respected around town and Im not doubting him at all but im wondering whether anyone else agrees or disagrees?
Don't re-invent the wheel, change the tyre..
I have a pilsner running inside at about 22 degress (way too hot I reckon) and has been for four days, airlock is very active and you can actually see the hop bits moving around inside through the glass...3 days? Tell him he's dreaming!
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you'll only see a brew complete in 3 days if you're making something like a 2%abv brew or brewing at waaaay too high temperatures.
although if, as suggested above, he was talking about racking after 3 days, then maybe.. that *may* have the benefit of less chance of oxidisation because the brew is still in an earlier stage of fermentation, and less chance of infection because the yeast is still holding the reins in the brew, but i'd think you'd lose the clearing benefit of racking, because you'd still build a bit of a trub up in the secondary fermenter.
although if, as suggested above, he was talking about racking after 3 days, then maybe.. that *may* have the benefit of less chance of oxidisation because the brew is still in an earlier stage of fermentation, and less chance of infection because the yeast is still holding the reins in the brew, but i'd think you'd lose the clearing benefit of racking, because you'd still build a bit of a trub up in the secondary fermenter.

3 days, wow. All my brews seem to take about 10 days to finish in primary as a minimum, and thats before I rack to secondary for a couple of weeks.
But I guess if you were just doing it for cheap beer and didn't care about the quality too much you could just grab some kits from Bilo and brew it on your heat mat in the summer heat to get it finished quick smart.
I have an ale going now that is still bubbling regularly and it's on its 8th day now. It's been fermenting in the low 20s in a cool place in our house because the brew fridge is tied up with a lager that is now on its 15th day and just been racked for lagering.
But I guess if you were just doing it for cheap beer and didn't care about the quality too much you could just grab some kits from Bilo and brew it on your heat mat in the summer heat to get it finished quick smart.
I have an ale going now that is still bubbling regularly and it's on its 8th day now. It's been fermenting in the low 20s in a cool place in our house because the brew fridge is tied up with a lager that is now on its 15th day and just been racked for lagering.
Re: 3 days
3 Days, I do not agree.Zuma wrote:My local HBS owner reckons three days in the primary only for all the beers I brew. This guy is very well respected around town and Im not doubting him at all but im wondering whether anyone else agrees or disagrees?
As mentioned must be cooking at 24+ with 250g Dex and 20g Yeast.
Rack at 3 days and left to finish....yes.
Cheers
Boonie
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Re: 3 days
Maybe for the Coopers kit racing yeast at a warm temp. I've had some slow down after 48hrs of volcano action.Zuma wrote:My local HBS owner reckons three days in the primary only for all the beers I brew. This guy is very well respected around town and Im not doubting him at all but im wondering whether anyone else agrees or disagrees?
IMO a way to make tres' ordinary beer quickly. Now I have a temp controlled brew fridge & use better yeasts.
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Re: 3 days
Should put a GT stripe on the sachet, eh? Love your work velophile.velophile wrote: .. Coopers kit racing yeast ...


Cheers,
Greg
It all depends on the size of your wort compared to the size of your yeast starter.and the temp fermented at.If you add 600ml yeast slurry (Ale) from yesterdays batch to a 1.5lt wort starter @ 24c and vigorously aerate, you will achieve high krausen within hours and it will feed itself out within 18hr.
The better the start- the better the beer.
Cheers Glenn
The better the start- the better the beer.
Cheers Glenn
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