Hi all, I have just tried my first stout... I spend a few $ on ingredients, more than normal for me (over $35 for the ingredients) and here are my notes:
Added to fermenting barrel on 25 Jan 2007 later in the evening.
-Muntons Connoissers Range Export Stout
-Town water used straight from the tap (as usual)
-Brewing Sugars @ 500gm Corn Syrup and 1.5Kg tin of Morgans Unhopped Dark Malt Extract.
-Added all ingredients and boiling water into the fermenter then topped up with water as standard to only 18 litres.
-The corn syrup powder congealed a lot and took a lot of stirring to mix, suspect it didn't all mix in though.
-Added 15ml of Licorice extract at end, stirred in and closed fermenter.
-Water temp was about 40 + Degrees C when first adding everything to the fermenter so left sit all night (roughly 12 hours) before adding yeast.
So that was that.... it was what I thought at the time around 28 C when i put the yeast in and went out for the day. When I returned I looked at the bubbler and it was static, but I did notice a lot of water droplettes in the bubbler indicating it HAD been bubbling. Closer inspection through the lid of the fermenter shows that yes, there is a lot of froth there, it had been bubbling throughout the day.
So the big question, why had it stopped bubbling only about 12 hours after I added the yeast?
My concerns are:
1) Was left overnight to cool before adding the yeast
2) Temp too high when adding yeast
3) Temp soared during the day whilst I was out (was a killer in my part of QLD today)
4) Is my thermometer dead?
5) I read on the instructions that this blend likes to sit between 18-22C... I'm WAY over that, am I in trouble here?
Now number 4 is interesting as it's one of those cheap little sticker types you stick on the side of the fermenter. It seems to change between blue, green and yellow, green being roughly the temp of the contents. When I sterilise the fermenter I always give it a flush afterwards with hot boiling water and the thermometer goes through the roof and literally off the scale and I wonder if that kind of heat can affect it and if my readings are wrong? EG, right now I've stuck the aircon on in the small room I brew in and after an hour of really chilled air con (in a confined space) the thermometer is still reading 30! seems strange. Look, I can test it and see by purchasing another, so don't stress about that too much, I guess for me I need to know if I can save this thing and if that short fermentation / bubbling is well... too short?
Any advice is REALLY appreciated! Can I save this thing?! Quality ingredients, hate to see them lost
Rob
Added to fermenting barrel on 25 Jan 2007 later in the evening.
-Muntons Connoissers Range Export Stout
-Town water used straight from the tap (as usual)
-Brewing Sugars @ 500gm Corn Syrup and 1.5Kg tin of Morgans Unhopped Dark Malt Extract.
-Added all ingredients and boiling water into the fermenter then topped up with water as standard to only 18 litres.
-The corn syrup powder congealed a lot and took a lot of stirring to mix, suspect it didn't all mix in though.
-Added 15ml of Licorice extract at end, stirred in and closed fermenter.
-Water temp was about 40 + Degrees C when first adding everything to the fermenter so left sit all night (roughly 12 hours) before adding yeast.
So that was that.... it was what I thought at the time around 28 C when i put the yeast in and went out for the day. When I returned I looked at the bubbler and it was static, but I did notice a lot of water droplettes in the bubbler indicating it HAD been bubbling. Closer inspection through the lid of the fermenter shows that yes, there is a lot of froth there, it had been bubbling throughout the day.
So the big question, why had it stopped bubbling only about 12 hours after I added the yeast?
My concerns are:
1) Was left overnight to cool before adding the yeast
2) Temp too high when adding yeast
3) Temp soared during the day whilst I was out (was a killer in my part of QLD today)
4) Is my thermometer dead?
5) I read on the instructions that this blend likes to sit between 18-22C... I'm WAY over that, am I in trouble here?
Now number 4 is interesting as it's one of those cheap little sticker types you stick on the side of the fermenter. It seems to change between blue, green and yellow, green being roughly the temp of the contents. When I sterilise the fermenter I always give it a flush afterwards with hot boiling water and the thermometer goes through the roof and literally off the scale and I wonder if that kind of heat can affect it and if my readings are wrong? EG, right now I've stuck the aircon on in the small room I brew in and after an hour of really chilled air con (in a confined space) the thermometer is still reading 30! seems strange. Look, I can test it and see by purchasing another, so don't stress about that too much, I guess for me I need to know if I can save this thing and if that short fermentation / bubbling is well... too short?
Any advice is REALLY appreciated! Can I save this thing?! Quality ingredients, hate to see them lost
Rob