Saison fermentation timing

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

jpd1009

Member
Joined
13/2/22
Messages
9
Reaction score
0
Location
Thornbury
Hi,
I am brewing a Coopers Citrus Sail Saison and have just realised that I am away for 7 days starting day 10 of the fermentation.

There is little information with the recipe on fermentation time other than checking OG, i.e. between 1008-1013 and stable for 2 days.

I am trying to do a little forward planning and understand when the stabilisation may occur based on others experience.

Do I simply test at day 8 9 and 10? and if so if there is still movement on the OG what to do?
Thanks in advance.
James
 

yankinoz

Well-Known Member
Joined
16/2/12
Messages
1,041
Reaction score
372
Ten days is often enough, and seventeen won't necessarily ruin the beer. What yeast are you using (kit?) and at what temperature are you fermenting? With that information, someone who knows the yeast might give you a good answer.
 

professional_drunk

Well-Known Member
Joined
31/3/13
Messages
225
Reaction score
90
I'd just leave it and check when you come back. Some extra maturation time will probably do it some good.
 

duncbrewer

Well-Known Member
Joined
8/12/19
Messages
550
Reaction score
202
Location
paremata nz
I wouldn't bother even opening it to check at day 8 etc as you can easily leave it and it risks less contamination by not opening it.
Bottle at your leisure when you get back and take a gravity reading for your records at that time.
 

Barry

To thine own self brew
Joined
7/12/02
Messages
1,193
Reaction score
93
Depending on the yeast used I tend to leave a Saison for 21 days in the fermenter. They are sometimes slow to finish so it is best to avoid over carbonated beer. The extra time should be no problem.
 

beerbong

Active Member
Joined
3/6/08
Messages
37
Reaction score
14
Lots of good advice above. I have left Saisons fermenting longer and even gone on unplanned holiday and having to leave it like you say (using Danstar Belle saison yeast usually). Never had a bad outcome with them. If you are dry hopping it and leaving it too long you might be rolling the dice there in terms of final flavors.
 

Latest posts

Top