Lager problems

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Brownie83

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Right i've had a coopers european lager in the fv for 12 days now, it has been stuck at 1015 so tonight when i took a reading and it was still the same i decided to give it a good stir up to "wake up" the yeasties again with a view to using some finings to clear it before bottling if it goes to 1000 before it has had time to settle again.

Now i'm a bit worried that i might have done wrong and undone all the good work.

What say you all??? will it be ok?
 
1015 is very high for that kit - it should finish around 1006 so a good stir should hopefully give the yeast a kickstart and hopefully fiish the job off :thumb: Don`t worry about it looking cloudy when you bottle it the yeast will drop out and in my experience most coopers kits drop bright :thumb: :thumb:

good luck :drink:
 
i thought it was high, and from what i have read i thought that it should be about done now - hence the stir to kick it into life.

how much longer would you expect it take to get it down to the required from now?

thanks for advice!!
 
It should really be done - before i went to AG i brewed about six coopers kits ( lager, mexican lager and bitter) they all took around 6 - 7 days to get to around 1006 then i bottled. I`ve never heard of problems with stuck ferments with coopers kits so it may be worth checking your hydrometer in tap water - it should read 1000, if it does and after a couple days maximum the reading in the brew hasn`t dropped (hopefully it will) then you could add some yeast nutrient or more yeast, hopefully a good stir will sort the problem though :cheers:
 
Not so much problems now but seeking a bit of advice.

The Coopers brewed out lowely in the end, added some finings and it cleared lovely before transfering to a barrel at the weekend.

it is in the old brick out house which is around 18 degrees - is this too warm after the first week of secondary fermentation? I've read that lager needs to be conditioned at a lower temperature? should i be putting it into a fridge that is set at around 8 degrees??

What say you all???
 
You`re correct in saying that lager should be cold conditionded after the initial secondary ferment in the bottle :thumb: However most if not all lager kits use normal brewing yeast for fermentation - real lager yeast should be fermented at a lower temp then ales etc, as it would be difficult to ferment at a lower temp without say a converted fridge or something with a heat control or thermostat the kit makers just chuck in a normal yeast :( Lower fermentation temps and cold conditioning (lagering) gives that crisp and clean taste of lager. It wouldn`t hurt to store your brew at a lower temp and it may help it taste more like lager - i found leaving it for at least five weeks improved the taste no end :thumb:

If you stick with kits you could do a lager kit with some real lager yeast in the cooler winter months - this may have a better result? Hope your brew turns out good though :drink:
 
I'm hoping to make the step up to making my own brews from scratch at some point but for the time being i'm sticking with the kits - i've done a bitter and am really pleased with the results given some of the horror stories on here. so maybe next year i'll give the real stuff a whirl.

thanks for the advice, i think i will pop it into the fridge that i have adapted (not perfectly temp controlled but it'll do for this attempt :grin:
 
sounds good to me :thumb: when your ready to go over to AG brewing this site is excellent - i only did my first AG last october and i`m planning my 20th at the moment :cool:
 

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