LogicalBrew
Active Member
Hi guys
I'm 3 days into my first ever brew - a Woodforde's Wherry kit, with the supplied yeast substituted for a Gervin ale yeast.
I'm having to brew in the garage (wife's rules!) and so I have a heating pad under the primary fermenting bucket, given that even the day-time temp is a little cold in the UK at the moment for the optimum range of the yeast.
The first night of fermentation I stupidly left the heat pad on and, by the next morning, the mix was at 28deg! (noob mistake - I know!) I killed the heat-pad and let ambient air cool the mixture so that it was back to normal operating range by about the start+24hours mark. Thanks to Amazon Prime I had a heat controller delivered and wired up by about the start+36 hours point and the temperature is now stable in the 18-20deg range (measured on the outside of the fermenting 'bucket').
My question is - is that 12-24 hours at 8-10degs over the optimum temperature going to have ruined this batch? Do I bother finishing the fermenting and conditioning the beer, only to be disappointed in a few weeks time when I start drinking it? Or do I just call it a learning opportunity and start again, now that I have my temperature control sorted?
Grateful for any advice even if it is bad news!
cheers
LB
I'm 3 days into my first ever brew - a Woodforde's Wherry kit, with the supplied yeast substituted for a Gervin ale yeast.
I'm having to brew in the garage (wife's rules!) and so I have a heating pad under the primary fermenting bucket, given that even the day-time temp is a little cold in the UK at the moment for the optimum range of the yeast.
The first night of fermentation I stupidly left the heat pad on and, by the next morning, the mix was at 28deg! (noob mistake - I know!) I killed the heat-pad and let ambient air cool the mixture so that it was back to normal operating range by about the start+24hours mark. Thanks to Amazon Prime I had a heat controller delivered and wired up by about the start+36 hours point and the temperature is now stable in the 18-20deg range (measured on the outside of the fermenting 'bucket').
My question is - is that 12-24 hours at 8-10degs over the optimum temperature going to have ruined this batch? Do I bother finishing the fermenting and conditioning the beer, only to be disappointed in a few weeks time when I start drinking it? Or do I just call it a learning opportunity and start again, now that I have my temperature control sorted?
Grateful for any advice even if it is bad news!
cheers
LB