tubbsy
Well-Known Member
The last 2 batches of beer (London Porter and a Dark Mild) had both had very low attenuation, but each batch was done differently.
https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1124926/tubbsy-s-london-porter/381043https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1125559/tubbsy-s-mild-ale/382341
The Mild was my first foray into BIAB and I thought it went pretty well, although I've since realised the temperature on the STC-1000 was reading several degrees low so I probably mashed at ~70C instead of 68C. The thermometer I used for the porter (with the traditional mash in the esky) reads pretty accurately though.
The OG on the porter was higher than expected (1.052 vs 1.046), but finished at 1.019.
The OG on the mild was pretty much as expected (1.035 vs 1.034), but finished at 1.016 which is a much lower ABV than I was aiming for. It's currently cold crashing, but I'm open to suggestions on giving it a kick in the guts to get it moving again.
I used different yeasts, but both were pitched dry as I figured they could handle the low SG.
The only similarity in the process was I used my DIY counterflow chiller. I also just realised my wort was probably pretty low in oxygen as there was minimal splashing into the fermenter.
Besides the lack of oxygenating the wort, is there anything else that stands out as being a cause for the low attenuation?
https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1124926/tubbsy-s-london-porter/381043https://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/view/1125559/tubbsy-s-mild-ale/382341
The Mild was my first foray into BIAB and I thought it went pretty well, although I've since realised the temperature on the STC-1000 was reading several degrees low so I probably mashed at ~70C instead of 68C. The thermometer I used for the porter (with the traditional mash in the esky) reads pretty accurately though.
The OG on the porter was higher than expected (1.052 vs 1.046), but finished at 1.019.
The OG on the mild was pretty much as expected (1.035 vs 1.034), but finished at 1.016 which is a much lower ABV than I was aiming for. It's currently cold crashing, but I'm open to suggestions on giving it a kick in the guts to get it moving again.
I used different yeasts, but both were pitched dry as I figured they could handle the low SG.
The only similarity in the process was I used my DIY counterflow chiller. I also just realised my wort was probably pretty low in oxygen as there was minimal splashing into the fermenter.
Besides the lack of oxygenating the wort, is there anything else that stands out as being a cause for the low attenuation?