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3 whole °c
or 0.3°c (my inkbird setting)
or 0.3°c (my inkbird setting)
3 whole °c
or 0.3°c (my inkbird setting)
@dlowe1992
I can't help but think we are all in the dark a bit. You mention loads of "could be's" , but you don't describe (or I missed it) the off flavours?
We don’t think it was acetaldehyde Anna, we think this is esters. I use Liberty Bell for all English ales and it produces red-apple esters at pretty much any temperature. Those esters are pleasant at the lower end of the range but can become quite strong at warmer fermentation temperatures (I ferment Liberty Bell at 18C). I think this is what the OP was tasting.Just catching up and interesting timing given this Heriot-Watt Brewing and Distilling course
Your temperature is unlikely to be an issue - it's not too warm for the yeast, and higher temperatures generally mean higher esters and lower acetaldehyde. Foxy is right about the exothermic reaction element though your volumes are low so you are unlikely to have a central area in the wort that is too hot. Also again - left for a while after the yeast will clean it up.
Over pitching, unlikely to be an issue - you have to go well over for it to be a problem, and even then left for a while later it will be absorbed by the yeast.
At the volumes and ale fermentation you are doing with new packets of dried yeast then don't bother with yeast rehydration, there's no point or gain.
I suspect the possible reasons for you are:
Left too long to mature on the lees when warm/hot - after the yeast are properly finished and depleted, which at that temperature may only be a few days. Left on the yeast will cause autoloysis and there will be insufficient live yeast to clean up the acetaldehyde caused fast enough.
Contamination - wild yeast or bacteria. Both in some cases can cause high acetaldhyde levels.
I suggest if you are fermenting at small volumes at this temperature that you check your SG at day 7 and day 8 and if stable at that stage bottle and let finish clearing in the bottle or move to a new container to clear first. Alternatively priming and bottle conditioning with a wee smidgeon of F2 yeast will fix acetaldehyde levels.
What would constitute as well over? The OP pitched at a rate of 1.3g/L, when Safale and Lallemand would recommend c0.6g/L for a typical pale ale. Effectively, halving the available minerals and amino acids available to each cell.Over pitching, unlikely to be an issue - you have to go well over for it to be a problem,
Do we? The OP is using pretty neutral yeasts. Esters are the result of yeast growth, which would be reduced by the high pitch rate.We don’t think it was acetaldehyde Anna, we think this is esters.
Yes. At least those of us that suspect esters rather than acetaldehyde doDo we? The OP is using pretty neutral yeasts. Esters are the result of yeast growth, which would be reduced by the high pitch rate.
From Wyeast.
High pitch rates can lead to:
- Very low ester production
- Very fast fermentations
- Thin or lacking body/mouthfeel
- Autolysis (Yeasty flavors due to lysing of cells)
- Low yeast viability
- Low IBU levels
- Greater alcohol yield
- Higher yeast cell count
- Higher percentage of old cells in harvested slurry
My money is still on low yeast viability post attenuation, being the cause of poor acetaldehyde reabsorption during maturation. Given that fast fermentation creates more acetaldehyde to begin with, as outlined by Palmer at around 17 to 26 minutes of the BruLab podcast I posted early in the thread.
Wort nutrients having to be shared by a larger number of cells, probably.@Sadfield - what would cause low yeast viability post attenuation?
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