merrydown
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2009
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Hi,
I hope one of you fine folk can help me with A Kveik kvestion about Kveik Voss brewing and bottle conditioning / priming...
I'm fermenting a 25L Mosaic / Maris Otter / Extra Pale SMaSH ale with Kveik Voss at 33.5C. It has been fermenting hard for 5 days now. It slowed right down 2 days ago and I decided it was time to dry hop. When I came to do so the next day, I noticed some little fingers had opened the fridge/heater and turned it off and the temperature had dropped down to 25C. I dry-hopped and turned it back on, noticing the SG had already dropped to 1.012
The low SG isn't a total surprise as I only achieved an OG of 1.066 and was expecting 1.075 so something went wrong with efficiency somewhere or my temperatures were not as they seemed. I am not 100% sure.
Anyway, the beer is back to a bubble rate of 2 or 3 a minute and I expect that will grind to a halt later today. I hope so! I exected the Kviek to burn through the sugars in 2 days and am concerned that this long spell in Primary could spoil the ale? I'm guessing not as this kind of high-temperature fermentation and storage could presumably go on for more than a week in the old days? When I opened the fermenter to dry hop, it certainly smelled more funky than a finishing ale normally would, but at 33.5C I'm guessing it would!
Anyway, the main question is this:
When calculating the priming dose for bottling, should I calculate the priming dose based on 33.5C?
I know this sounds obvious, but the calculator figures seem to go a bit whacky at temperatures north of 35C. I'm starting to wonder if there are different rules for high-temperature fermentations?
The calculator I was using was this fellow and if you try figures over 35C you will see the priming rates drop again:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/
Could you offer any advice re: priming please and reassurance about the viability of the ale after being hot for 6 days by the time I think it will have finished? Wishing I'd held back on the dry hopping now.
Many thanks,
Jim
I hope one of you fine folk can help me with A Kveik kvestion about Kveik Voss brewing and bottle conditioning / priming...
I'm fermenting a 25L Mosaic / Maris Otter / Extra Pale SMaSH ale with Kveik Voss at 33.5C. It has been fermenting hard for 5 days now. It slowed right down 2 days ago and I decided it was time to dry hop. When I came to do so the next day, I noticed some little fingers had opened the fridge/heater and turned it off and the temperature had dropped down to 25C. I dry-hopped and turned it back on, noticing the SG had already dropped to 1.012
The low SG isn't a total surprise as I only achieved an OG of 1.066 and was expecting 1.075 so something went wrong with efficiency somewhere or my temperatures were not as they seemed. I am not 100% sure.
Anyway, the beer is back to a bubble rate of 2 or 3 a minute and I expect that will grind to a halt later today. I hope so! I exected the Kviek to burn through the sugars in 2 days and am concerned that this long spell in Primary could spoil the ale? I'm guessing not as this kind of high-temperature fermentation and storage could presumably go on for more than a week in the old days? When I opened the fermenter to dry hop, it certainly smelled more funky than a finishing ale normally would, but at 33.5C I'm guessing it would!
Anyway, the main question is this:
When calculating the priming dose for bottling, should I calculate the priming dose based on 33.5C?
I know this sounds obvious, but the calculator figures seem to go a bit whacky at temperatures north of 35C. I'm starting to wonder if there are different rules for high-temperature fermentations?
The calculator I was using was this fellow and if you try figures over 35C you will see the priming rates drop again:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/
Could you offer any advice re: priming please and reassurance about the viability of the ale after being hot for 6 days by the time I think it will have finished? Wishing I'd held back on the dry hopping now.
Many thanks,
Jim