Good idea bypass the tap all togetherBrewnicorn said:Just siphoned into a secondary and dry hopped at the same time. Hoping for the best. FG is close enough so will drop it in the fridge for a few days. Cross fingers.
Thanks Coodgee! I think it was the green bits that threw me the mostCoodgee said:^^ that is a beautiful looking normal every day ferment. Nothing wrong. I and many others prefer to dry hop at around ferment temp as it tends to give the best fruity/floral aroma.
You're fine to cold crash and then dry hop once the yeast has fallen out of suspension, but I think cold crashing and dry hopping won't work too well. The yeast in suspension will cling to the hops/oils and pull them to the bottom as it falls out. I just dry hopped one of my beers and experimented a bit. I crashed it to 14 degrees to drop the yeast out, then added the hops to the fermenter. In 3 days I will crash to 0 and then keg after 2 days.TonyF said:Thanks Coodgee! I think it was the green bits that threw me the most
I've dry hopped once in the keg and that blocked it up towards the end so thought I'd try the fermenter method. Will keep in mind about letting it sit at ferment temp next time!
Just trialling it mate. Theory is that more of the yeast will drop out before I dry hop, so the hops can do their thing without clinging to the yeast and being pulled to the bottom when crashed to 1 degree.Garfield said:Tony, your fermenter looks like any batch with dry hopping. The chunks are propably hop flakes floated by residual co2 from the cold crash.
I'm with Coodgee and BK - 3 day dry hop at ferment temp before cold crash. I've been know to time this with last few days of active ferment to max hop utilisation with the co2 "stirring" the hops through the beer for a few days. Cold crash for 24hr after and bottle her up.
BK, any reason for the two temp cold crash?
Cheers
Garf
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