mattwalker19
New Member
- Joined
- 4/10/07
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hello all
hopefully brewing a an easy drinking summer beer at the moment and cant cant decide wether its time to bottle
the brew is as follows
kit coopers mexican cerveza
1kg pure harvest rice malt syrup
i made it to 22 litres, kit yeast was pitched at about 19 deg. cel. OG 1036 on 7th November
after about a week of primary fermentation the pancake/crust dissipated and settled. i racked to a secondary to let it settle down for a while prior to bottling. temp has hovered between 19 and 22 deg cel. mark for the entire period
its now 5th Dec and i am still noticing activity. CO2 bubble clusters (about the 10 to 15 the size of 5cent pieces) are still on the surface and bubbles are slowly rising from the bottom of the brew
gravity has been a constant 1006 measured today and also this time last week
I did notice when i hydrated the kit yeast that it seemed to be made of 2 types (the yeast granules, that resemble sand, had 2 distinct colours as if it was a mix of 2 types) is this correct as i am don't know what strains of yeast coopers supply in this mix.
my theory was that one is a lager yeast which is taking longer to ferment out but it doesn't fit with my constant gravity readings and brewing temperature.
any thought would be appreciated
hopefully brewing a an easy drinking summer beer at the moment and cant cant decide wether its time to bottle
the brew is as follows
kit coopers mexican cerveza
1kg pure harvest rice malt syrup
i made it to 22 litres, kit yeast was pitched at about 19 deg. cel. OG 1036 on 7th November
after about a week of primary fermentation the pancake/crust dissipated and settled. i racked to a secondary to let it settle down for a while prior to bottling. temp has hovered between 19 and 22 deg cel. mark for the entire period
its now 5th Dec and i am still noticing activity. CO2 bubble clusters (about the 10 to 15 the size of 5cent pieces) are still on the surface and bubbles are slowly rising from the bottom of the brew
gravity has been a constant 1006 measured today and also this time last week
I did notice when i hydrated the kit yeast that it seemed to be made of 2 types (the yeast granules, that resemble sand, had 2 distinct colours as if it was a mix of 2 types) is this correct as i am don't know what strains of yeast coopers supply in this mix.
my theory was that one is a lager yeast which is taking longer to ferment out but it doesn't fit with my constant gravity readings and brewing temperature.
any thought would be appreciated