Luxo_Aussie
Well-Known Member
G'day All,
I've come across an issue with a Belgian Triple which I fermented with WLP 530. Recipe (for 21L) was 6Kg of grains (mostly Weyermann extra pale pils with a bit of vienna & carahell), mashed fairly low with steps of 15@52, 30@62, 30@67 & 20@72 hopped with Styrian Goldings with 850g of candi sugar added at flame out.
Fermentation was two weeks in primary, two weeks in secondary. However, I thoroughly over-pitched (onto entire yeast cast from earlier batch) and then went on to stress out the yeast in the primary by fermenting at about 24 degrees. The Krausen exploded out the airlock as well, epic mess! OG was 1083, FG (at bottling) was 1012, tested over two days.
Bottling was back in May, dextrose bulk priming to reach a CO2 volume of 2.7. I have noticed that all of the bottles have been over-carbonated (not quite gushing but foam escapes the bottles after pouring half) so I did a side-by-side tasting next to Westmalle Triple last night. Mine was very close to the commercial, albiet mine wasn't as good, had rougher flavors and just less refined overall. I tested the FG and it was now 1007!
It doesn't appear to be a bottle infection as there's consistency with the over-carbonation across bottles there's no off flavors. It also appears that this might be an issue with another beer (Belgian Strong Dark) which used the same yeast, same over-pitch, same mess and was stressed out in the same way. I'm trying to work out the root cause of this problem; if it was not enough time for WLP 530 to fully ferment, stuck fermentation towards the end due to stressing the yeast or other reasons, an infection somewhere along the line or something else. Does anyone have an idea what might have happened here? Any insights greatly appreciated!
Cheers,
Tristan
I've come across an issue with a Belgian Triple which I fermented with WLP 530. Recipe (for 21L) was 6Kg of grains (mostly Weyermann extra pale pils with a bit of vienna & carahell), mashed fairly low with steps of 15@52, 30@62, 30@67 & 20@72 hopped with Styrian Goldings with 850g of candi sugar added at flame out.
Fermentation was two weeks in primary, two weeks in secondary. However, I thoroughly over-pitched (onto entire yeast cast from earlier batch) and then went on to stress out the yeast in the primary by fermenting at about 24 degrees. The Krausen exploded out the airlock as well, epic mess! OG was 1083, FG (at bottling) was 1012, tested over two days.
Bottling was back in May, dextrose bulk priming to reach a CO2 volume of 2.7. I have noticed that all of the bottles have been over-carbonated (not quite gushing but foam escapes the bottles after pouring half) so I did a side-by-side tasting next to Westmalle Triple last night. Mine was very close to the commercial, albiet mine wasn't as good, had rougher flavors and just less refined overall. I tested the FG and it was now 1007!
It doesn't appear to be a bottle infection as there's consistency with the over-carbonation across bottles there's no off flavors. It also appears that this might be an issue with another beer (Belgian Strong Dark) which used the same yeast, same over-pitch, same mess and was stressed out in the same way. I'm trying to work out the root cause of this problem; if it was not enough time for WLP 530 to fully ferment, stuck fermentation towards the end due to stressing the yeast or other reasons, an infection somewhere along the line or something else. Does anyone have an idea what might have happened here? Any insights greatly appreciated!
Cheers,
Tristan