Fermentation Time - Am I waiting long enough?

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_jon_

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Have I been leaving my brews in the FV for long enough?

I (at the moment) tend to do primary AND secondary (although I'm getting fed up with secondary, and moving to Fermentasaurus so won't need to).. but my general rule of thumb is 1 week in primary, move to secondary (dry hop if needed) then another 5 days in secondary. Then keg, force carbonate and tap it (if needed). So in total my brews tend to be in fermentation for about 10-14 days.

Is this enough?

I just kegged my Punk IPA Clone last night, force carb'd it last night and left it sitting at 20psi. Purged this morning and set to 10psi, had a small sample... and sour! Like the hops haven't mellowed.

Trying to work out whether it just needs more time or whether I cocked it up.
 
Not even looked in to kegging so not sure how that affects it, but I stick with a 2 week rule. 2 weeks in FV, 2 weeks to bottle condition.

Obviously different beer styles need different length of time to condition out but I believe IPAs should be drunk young as the hop flavours will disappear quickly.

I haven't heard of hops bringing sour flavours to a beer before, although you can get carbonic acid flavours from carbing? could it be that?
 
My current brew an ag cascade pale ale is on day 17 in the fv. I've switched the heat tray off and free styling a cold crash. I'll bung it in the fridge later and bottle it Saturday. ..
 
Maybe I am not leaving it long enough. My next brew will be in the Fermentasaurus and I'll be closed transferring to keg. So no exposure. I'll leave it for 2-3 weeks and see if it makes a difference.
 
Apart from the primary being finished, enough time for clean up etc etc, my aim is clarity or thereabouts at packaging and for me that means no less than 14 days in the FV, more likely 16/17 days usually including racking off perhaps with a dry hop. Apart from that some beers are still chugging along at 14 days so there is no hard and fast rule that you can adopt, vey much like the time required for maturing/conditioning which depends on all sorts of factors.
 
Recently I've been fermenting for approx 10 days before cold crashing and kegging without any probs, but have found beers need a week in the keg to be at their best.
To try to ensure the fermentation is complete and the yeasties clean up after themselves, I gradually ramp up the temp in the brew fridge after the initial vigirous ferment dies down.
 
Fermentation is done when it's done, test its gravity and you'll know.

I don't use secondary, it's in primary until I hit the target or close and not moving and then transferred to the PB or bottled after moving to a bottling bucket.

If you leave it long enough in primary to do what it needs to do, pretty much everything will have dropped out of suspension to leave a pretty clear beer, if I need to dry hop I would just chuck it in the primary.

I like to make things as close to the KISS principle as possible throughout the entire brewing process.
 
I don't even use a bottling bucket, I just put sugar straight in the bottles and have a tap and little bottler on my primary.
 
I did a blonde ale a fortnight ago and it's been in the fermenter ever since.

Do you think I am safe to bottle over the weekend? Where would you go from there? 2 more weeks at room temp then fridge?

I usually Prime my bottles with a small amount of brewing sugar too - is this right?
 
I did a blonde ale a fortnight ago and it's been in the fermenter ever since.

Do you think I am safe to bottle over the weekend? Where would you go from there? 2 more weeks at room temp then fridge?

I usually Prime my bottles with a small amount of brewing sugar too - is this right?

Probably but have you tested it with a hydrometer?
 
Probably but have you tested it with a hydrometer?


No, but as a relative noob I made up a recipe (based on one in a CAMRA book) and so haven't got an expected final gravity:doh:

Having read more I will follow proper recipes in future or at least go through the Brewers Friend calculators.

My fermenter doesn't have a tap also so I am scared of infection if I remove the lid or dip a trial jar in :hmm:
 
No, but as a relative noob I made up a recipe (based on one in a CAMRA book) and so haven't got an expected final gravity:doh:

Having read more I will follow proper recipes in future or at least go through the Brewers Friend calculators.

My fermenter doesn't have a tap also so I am scared of infection if I remove the lid or dip a trial jar in :hmm:

I use a turkey baster to take gravity samples. Just lift the lid and slid it off just enough to get the baster in.

Beer is A LOT more resistant to infecton than new HBers think so I wouldn't worry too much about infection. I'm always opening my FV's for samples and yeast harvesting
 
I just tested my wheat beer again. It's sitting at a fairly respectable 1.010. So it did carry on after I thought it stuck. It does taste bland and boring though, and even has a subtle strange after taste. Doesn't taste or small off.. but just an after taste I'm not expecting. Which is probably because I forgot half of the recipe lol.

I'm going to add the rest of the recipe in a small amount of boiled water. See if it saves it.
 
Whatever you stick in it...clean and sterilise! I'm with myqul. ..get a baster..about a quid in wilko..pick up a couple of pkts of gervin while you're there...always handy.
 
I've recently increased my fermentation time - its tempting to try and speed things up but you may cause yourself more issues. My Nelson Sauvin SMASH has been in fermenter for 14 days so far, I'm planning on transferring to secondary this weekend and probably leave it for another few days then cold crash in the garage
 
I use a turkey baster to take gravity samples. Just lift the lid and slid it off just enough to get the baster in.

Beer is A LOT more resistant to infecton than new HBers think so I wouldn't worry too much about infection. I'm always opening my FV's for samples and yeast harvesting
+1 on that
I just drop the (sanitised) hydrometer into the brew. I dont even bother to take samples. The reading you get is still the same, or good enough.
And I always maintain if you adopt a sensible sanitising regime (without being too OTT) you have to be extremely unlucky to get an infection.
 
At the start before you pitched the yeast...then...2 weeks later. Unless....there is absolutely ZERO signs of fermentation after a couple of days OR the fermentation is still visible at 2 weeks which can happen with some styles. Usually it's start,after a fortnight,if it's quiet and where it should be,a couple of consecutive days,if it's stable,cold crash for a few days then keg or bottle.
 

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