Firstly sorry I waffle, but I try to give as much detail as I can, so you can help me, if you are bored easily please do not read on;
Background: I have brewed wine and larger in the past but not ale (and I havenât brewed anything for a few years now, but I love doing it â sometimes rubbish results but mostly good, ish)
I went on, what I can only describe as, a very highly recommended tour of the Woodfordes brewery on Sunday and decided to purchase a Woodfordes â âNelsons Revenge homebrew kitâ. I have to admit I was very very exited to start brewing again, after all the years.
Monday I purchased 22L of bottled spring water and that evening I sterilised one of my fermentation buckets and started the brew. Boiled 3.5l of the water put the cans into very hot water toped up with the rest and the yeast etc, as per instructions. After starting the brew I went to sterilise my hydrometer but it was broken, so I went to bed.
The next morning; no bubbles, after work I raced home and still no bubbles, annoyed I pulled the sealing tape from around the side of the bucket (I always seal the lid with industrial tape) and noted plenty of froff on the top, I then remembered one of my buckets has done this in the past (I must have a non air tight bucket, also long time since my last brew, so I had forgotten), so I sealed off the lid again and went to bed (drinking, eating and sleeping are my 2nd, 3rd and 4th favourite things to do)
The next day no bubbles again, I pulled the bubble wrap up from the bottom (yes I use bubble wrap, round the bucket to minimise risk of temperature fluctuations, the room is thermostatically controlled â currently this week 19â°C, but it can fluctuate by 1 to 2â°C) and there is about 6mm of white sediment at the bottom, the middle looks a bit cloudy and the head has almost gone, just a bit of froff left.
Without a hydrometer itâs hard to tell if the brew has finished, so what do I do?
Equipment I have available:
Another fermenting bucket
A VINbright filter + filters (from wine making days)
Enough 660ml bottles â clear â green â brown
I have some old finings (Silica Hydrolised) and enzymeâs (Malto-Dextrin, Pectic Enzyme) but I think they are for wine making not ale.
I do not have a hydrometer, pressure bottle, or Co2 other than a fire extinguisher and have no intention of buying them unless absolutely needed (this will increase the one off cost of making a one of batch)
After doing a lot of online reading about primary and secondary fermentation I am unsure what to do.
Q:
Do I wait another day or two and rack off into the other fermenting bucket, with the intention of going to bottle shortly after (a few days later)?
Do I wait another week or two and go to bottle?
Do I use the finings or enzymeâs?
Do I use the wine filter?
I aâint fick or nuâfin, all I want is a nice clear bubbly ale with flavour in bottles, time is no object but I canât justify buying lots of equipment for a one off batch, I can store the bottles at ambient temperature at the moment (9 - 15â°C)
If you are still reading, then well done and Many Thanks in advance, any help is most appreciated
Neil
Background: I have brewed wine and larger in the past but not ale (and I havenât brewed anything for a few years now, but I love doing it â sometimes rubbish results but mostly good, ish)
I went on, what I can only describe as, a very highly recommended tour of the Woodfordes brewery on Sunday and decided to purchase a Woodfordes â âNelsons Revenge homebrew kitâ. I have to admit I was very very exited to start brewing again, after all the years.
Monday I purchased 22L of bottled spring water and that evening I sterilised one of my fermentation buckets and started the brew. Boiled 3.5l of the water put the cans into very hot water toped up with the rest and the yeast etc, as per instructions. After starting the brew I went to sterilise my hydrometer but it was broken, so I went to bed.
The next morning; no bubbles, after work I raced home and still no bubbles, annoyed I pulled the sealing tape from around the side of the bucket (I always seal the lid with industrial tape) and noted plenty of froff on the top, I then remembered one of my buckets has done this in the past (I must have a non air tight bucket, also long time since my last brew, so I had forgotten), so I sealed off the lid again and went to bed (drinking, eating and sleeping are my 2nd, 3rd and 4th favourite things to do)
The next day no bubbles again, I pulled the bubble wrap up from the bottom (yes I use bubble wrap, round the bucket to minimise risk of temperature fluctuations, the room is thermostatically controlled â currently this week 19â°C, but it can fluctuate by 1 to 2â°C) and there is about 6mm of white sediment at the bottom, the middle looks a bit cloudy and the head has almost gone, just a bit of froff left.
Without a hydrometer itâs hard to tell if the brew has finished, so what do I do?
Equipment I have available:
Another fermenting bucket
A VINbright filter + filters (from wine making days)
Enough 660ml bottles â clear â green â brown
I have some old finings (Silica Hydrolised) and enzymeâs (Malto-Dextrin, Pectic Enzyme) but I think they are for wine making not ale.
I do not have a hydrometer, pressure bottle, or Co2 other than a fire extinguisher and have no intention of buying them unless absolutely needed (this will increase the one off cost of making a one of batch)
After doing a lot of online reading about primary and secondary fermentation I am unsure what to do.
Q:
Do I wait another day or two and rack off into the other fermenting bucket, with the intention of going to bottle shortly after (a few days later)?
Do I wait another week or two and go to bottle?
Do I use the finings or enzymeâs?
Do I use the wine filter?
I aâint fick or nuâfin, all I want is a nice clear bubbly ale with flavour in bottles, time is no object but I canât justify buying lots of equipment for a one off batch, I can store the bottles at ambient temperature at the moment (9 - 15â°C)
If you are still reading, then well done and Many Thanks in advance, any help is most appreciated
Neil