Shominy
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2020
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I'm now onto my second kit brew. The first was a Geordie Yorkshire Bitter and this one is a Festival Father Hook's Best Bitter. My process is pretty standard, I rehydrate the yeast before I pitch as I had read that it can aid fermentation and I figured it can't do any harm. I have a fermentation fridge and have a heat belt around the fermenter and temperature is controlled with an Inkbird controller.
Both brews have had an OG of 1.040 which is reasonable. Both have been left to ferment in the fridge with the controller set to 21 degrees with the probe bubble wrapped and stuck to the side of the bucket. The first kit got stuck at about 1.020 even after I'd left it there for about 3 weeks it didn't move. Initial fermentation looked promising with the airlock bubbling away after a day and then dying off after a few days. I gave it a light stir and put the temp up by a couple of degrees and managed to eek it out to 1.014 where it stayed and I ended up calling it a day there and packaging it at 1.014 after one month in primary. I put this down to it perhaps being not brilliant because it was a cheap kit and maybe the yeast was a bit of a duff packet.
This second brew I have followed the exact same process. I started this one fermenting 17 days ago now and there was activity in the airlock after about 8 hours. It died off again after a few days and I've left it until now to take a hydrometer reading. It's at 1.020 again. I've given it a small shake and increased the temperature to 22.5 on the Inkbird. I took an internal reading with a meat thermometer and it was reading about a degree lower than the Inkbird but surely if it had been fermenting at a slightly lower temperature of say 18 or 19 degrees it would still be much lower than this after 3 weeks to a month?
I've read plenty about stuck fermentation and from what I can gather the obvious things are bad/not enough yeast, bad temperature control or lack of oxygen. I have aerated the wort both times but gave this second batch a bit more a shake before I pitched but maybe it wasn't enough? There's a chance I could be fermenting at a lower temperature than my controller reads but it would still be 19 or 20 degrees which should be fine. I have rehydrated the yeast in both batches before I pitched it but I am certain I have done this in the appropriate manner so I am not really sure why I have had stuck fermentations in both batches.
Does anyone know why this may be?
Both brews have had an OG of 1.040 which is reasonable. Both have been left to ferment in the fridge with the controller set to 21 degrees with the probe bubble wrapped and stuck to the side of the bucket. The first kit got stuck at about 1.020 even after I'd left it there for about 3 weeks it didn't move. Initial fermentation looked promising with the airlock bubbling away after a day and then dying off after a few days. I gave it a light stir and put the temp up by a couple of degrees and managed to eek it out to 1.014 where it stayed and I ended up calling it a day there and packaging it at 1.014 after one month in primary. I put this down to it perhaps being not brilliant because it was a cheap kit and maybe the yeast was a bit of a duff packet.
This second brew I have followed the exact same process. I started this one fermenting 17 days ago now and there was activity in the airlock after about 8 hours. It died off again after a few days and I've left it until now to take a hydrometer reading. It's at 1.020 again. I've given it a small shake and increased the temperature to 22.5 on the Inkbird. I took an internal reading with a meat thermometer and it was reading about a degree lower than the Inkbird but surely if it had been fermenting at a slightly lower temperature of say 18 or 19 degrees it would still be much lower than this after 3 weeks to a month?
I've read plenty about stuck fermentation and from what I can gather the obvious things are bad/not enough yeast, bad temperature control or lack of oxygen. I have aerated the wort both times but gave this second batch a bit more a shake before I pitched but maybe it wasn't enough? There's a chance I could be fermenting at a lower temperature than my controller reads but it would still be 19 or 20 degrees which should be fine. I have rehydrated the yeast in both batches before I pitched it but I am certain I have done this in the appropriate manner so I am not really sure why I have had stuck fermentations in both batches.
Does anyone know why this may be?