Mr. No-Tip
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I put a Saison down 12 days ago and it's been pretty static for the last 5 days.
Here are the vital statistics:
At this stage I am inclined to leave it till Monday night, taking us to 14 days, then kegging if it hasn't moved. The hydrometer sample does taste a bit full, of course, but I think I'd rather as full bodied OK saison than an oxidised one that may or may not lose that body. It's clearly no comp beer, but might be an ok drinker.
Has anyone else stalled so (relatively) low and had a saison pick up again?
Does anyone want to point out that my mash schedule could explan this?
Here are the vital statistics:
- Standard saison grain bill - 75% pils, 7ish% each of wheat and Munich.
- Mashed at 50 for 10, 63 for 75, 67 for 30, 76 for 15.
- Pitched an active 2l starter of WLP568 - I am told and have experienced this yeast avoids stalling with the addition of the belgian yeast - last time it finished in four days. The yeast was out of date, but the starter was happy and growing.
- Oxygenated and pitched into 27l of 1.051 (nice and low for a table saison)
- Pitched at 21 and ramped up.
- Monster krausen in less than 12 hours, subsided krausen at 24 hours.
- 1.030 at day 3. Temp was about 24 by now.
- 1.014 at day 5 or 6. Temp was 27ish.
- Still 1.014 at day 12. Temp has been 30 for a good few days, with tilting of the fermenter here and there. Still cloudy but no visible signs of fermentation.
At this stage I am inclined to leave it till Monday night, taking us to 14 days, then kegging if it hasn't moved. The hydrometer sample does taste a bit full, of course, but I think I'd rather as full bodied OK saison than an oxidised one that may or may not lose that body. It's clearly no comp beer, but might be an ok drinker.
Has anyone else stalled so (relatively) low and had a saison pick up again?
Does anyone want to point out that my mash schedule could explan this?