supergaijin
New Member
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2018
- Messages
- 11
- Reaction score
- 7
Hi all. I have been brewing kits for years but only recently started brewing a kit straight after bottling without washing out the brew bucket. Sometimes on the same evening or the next day. The most I've done before washing out the bucket is 3.
Starting with a clean bucket, I leave the brew upstairs where it gets to around 21-22 degrees. Any higher and I take it downstairs as I dislike esters in my beer. Activity in the bubbler usually starts the next evening and I leave it to do its thing for a fortnight.
I made the occasional Ginger Beer on the dregs without issue and wondered what would happen if I just threw another beer kit straight upon the dregs. To be completely honest, laziness may have had something to do with it. After 3 rotations I clean it all out. I've done lager kits on lagers, and stouts on larger dreds with no ill effect so far. In total I've made about 15 or 20 kits like this. Brands used were Mangrove Jacks and Brewferm.
That said, activity kicks off within 6hrs and it ferments very quickly upstairs and even downstairs the yeast chews through the sugar within the week even at 16 degrees. So temperature control seems fairly critical and I wouldn't try this in summer with ambient temps of 24. I have a isothermic bag for brewing in summer and rotate a frozen bottle in it while which means a ambient temp of 18 or so but I wouldn't chance a "double barrel beer kit" as I have been known to forget to rotate the bottles before.
I've noticed more esters in the second brew and for me it borders on too much in the third. My understanding of ester creation was primarily due to temp. The temp for brews 1, 2 and 3 remain constant or even reduced on brew 2/3 however fermentation is dramatic on #2 and ferocious on #3 and the ester seems to correspond. Can anyone tell me why?
Cheers, Harv
Starting with a clean bucket, I leave the brew upstairs where it gets to around 21-22 degrees. Any higher and I take it downstairs as I dislike esters in my beer. Activity in the bubbler usually starts the next evening and I leave it to do its thing for a fortnight.
I made the occasional Ginger Beer on the dregs without issue and wondered what would happen if I just threw another beer kit straight upon the dregs. To be completely honest, laziness may have had something to do with it. After 3 rotations I clean it all out. I've done lager kits on lagers, and stouts on larger dreds with no ill effect so far. In total I've made about 15 or 20 kits like this. Brands used were Mangrove Jacks and Brewferm.
That said, activity kicks off within 6hrs and it ferments very quickly upstairs and even downstairs the yeast chews through the sugar within the week even at 16 degrees. So temperature control seems fairly critical and I wouldn't try this in summer with ambient temps of 24. I have a isothermic bag for brewing in summer and rotate a frozen bottle in it while which means a ambient temp of 18 or so but I wouldn't chance a "double barrel beer kit" as I have been known to forget to rotate the bottles before.
I've noticed more esters in the second brew and for me it borders on too much in the third. My understanding of ester creation was primarily due to temp. The temp for brews 1, 2 and 3 remain constant or even reduced on brew 2/3 however fermentation is dramatic on #2 and ferocious on #3 and the ester seems to correspond. Can anyone tell me why?
Cheers, Harv