Hey all,
I brewed a batch of beer (Cascade SMaSH-ish) on a whim last week because I had an unexpected free afternoon, but as it was unplanned when I came to put it in my fermentation fridge I found it wasn't free
Its been about 22c indoors and I don't have a garage, so as I was using a Fermzilla I pitched the yeast at around 27-28c and brought the pressure straight up to 12psi and let it go.
It's stayed at that temp/pressure throughout a fairly rapid fermentation, and now that its more or less done the temp is dropping and we're down to about 23c. Yeast is Verdant IPA.
Beer tastes fine at this stage, but I've not brewed it before, or done a pressure fermentation before, so can't compare it but my questions for you are:
- Would you have done the same thing?
- Was there a better way to go?
- Would it have been better to let the pressure rise naturally (even at the higher temperature) rather than apply the pressure from the start?
Cheers!
I brewed a batch of beer (Cascade SMaSH-ish) on a whim last week because I had an unexpected free afternoon, but as it was unplanned when I came to put it in my fermentation fridge I found it wasn't free
Its been about 22c indoors and I don't have a garage, so as I was using a Fermzilla I pitched the yeast at around 27-28c and brought the pressure straight up to 12psi and let it go.
It's stayed at that temp/pressure throughout a fairly rapid fermentation, and now that its more or less done the temp is dropping and we're down to about 23c. Yeast is Verdant IPA.
Beer tastes fine at this stage, but I've not brewed it before, or done a pressure fermentation before, so can't compare it but my questions for you are:
- Would you have done the same thing?
- Was there a better way to go?
- Would it have been better to let the pressure rise naturally (even at the higher temperature) rather than apply the pressure from the start?
Cheers!