Hyper.Intelligent.Fish
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 27/4/13
- Messages
- 47
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Hi all. Long time lurker, first time poster.
I started my first batch of apple cider on Wednesday April 18. It was a bog easy recipe, more dipping my toe in the water rather than jumping in the deep end. Essentially it's a 3L bottle of juice, slightly emptied, pitched with some bakers yeast from the cupboard and sealed with a bung and "S" Airlock.
In my infinite wisdom I put the brew in a cupboard on the front porch to keep it out of the way of the missus.
The next few nights were quite cold, maybe down to 10 degrees C or so. I checked the brew periodically over the next few days, and the cupboard did have the odour of the fermenting juice, but the s lock never really bubbled, and shortly afterwards I noticed sediments settling to the bottom.
I brought the brew inside, hoping that the cold didn't kill the yeast, but the temp in the kitchen which hovers around the 20 degrees C mark didn't seem to improve it.
On Wednesday the 25th I put down another 3 batches, one apple with bakers yeast (replicating brew 1), one apple with champagne yeast, and one apple blackcurrent with champagne yeast. All four brews are now sitting next to each other in an old desk in my dining room.
The three newest batches are fermenting nicely, regular bubbles through the airlock and an active head on the juice, but my first batch doesn't seem to be doing anything. Any help or advice would be appreciated, apart from the advice that I shouldn't have used bakers yeast. I know that, but it was all I had at the time.
1) Would temps around the 10 degree mark kill off a yeast culture? Seems odd, especially since people refrigerate and store yeast in fridges colder than that.
2) Could I pitch in another packet of bakers yeast to kick start the process again?
3) Could I save the brew by decanting it into the other active bakers yeast brew in a larger jug?
Feel free to suggest tipping the whole thing out, but I'd rather do something constructive with it. It's a learning experience.
Thanks,
Fish.
I started my first batch of apple cider on Wednesday April 18. It was a bog easy recipe, more dipping my toe in the water rather than jumping in the deep end. Essentially it's a 3L bottle of juice, slightly emptied, pitched with some bakers yeast from the cupboard and sealed with a bung and "S" Airlock.
In my infinite wisdom I put the brew in a cupboard on the front porch to keep it out of the way of the missus.
The next few nights were quite cold, maybe down to 10 degrees C or so. I checked the brew periodically over the next few days, and the cupboard did have the odour of the fermenting juice, but the s lock never really bubbled, and shortly afterwards I noticed sediments settling to the bottom.
I brought the brew inside, hoping that the cold didn't kill the yeast, but the temp in the kitchen which hovers around the 20 degrees C mark didn't seem to improve it.
On Wednesday the 25th I put down another 3 batches, one apple with bakers yeast (replicating brew 1), one apple with champagne yeast, and one apple blackcurrent with champagne yeast. All four brews are now sitting next to each other in an old desk in my dining room.
The three newest batches are fermenting nicely, regular bubbles through the airlock and an active head on the juice, but my first batch doesn't seem to be doing anything. Any help or advice would be appreciated, apart from the advice that I shouldn't have used bakers yeast. I know that, but it was all I had at the time.
1) Would temps around the 10 degree mark kill off a yeast culture? Seems odd, especially since people refrigerate and store yeast in fridges colder than that.
2) Could I pitch in another packet of bakers yeast to kick start the process again?
3) Could I save the brew by decanting it into the other active bakers yeast brew in a larger jug?
Feel free to suggest tipping the whole thing out, but I'd rather do something constructive with it. It's a learning experience.
Thanks,
Fish.