Istanbilly
Active Member
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2020
- Messages
- 26
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Hi all,
I am getting ready to brew my first all grain batch, using a Grainfather 30 and fermenting in a Fermzilla 27 litre without pressurisation. This is also my first batch of home brew since about 1980 when I made a few kit batches. Once I take the fermentation to the point where all the yeast has finished doing its job I can then take out all the trub. But if I do that how do I then get my priming sugar to bring about carbonisation in the bottles as I will have removed the yeast (I believe).
So, at the end of the fermentation period do I...
1. Leave the trub in the Fermzilla, add the priming sugar solution and hope the yeast in the trub does the job of carbonising the beer (but then I would not be in a position to ensure that the priming sugar has evenly distributed through the beer)
2. Take off the trub, add the priming sugar to the Fermzilla, give it a swirl round and hope there is enough residual yeast in the beer to make the carbonisation work.
3. Take off the trub, add the priming sugar solution to the Fermzilla, at the same time adding a little (how much?) trub back in and give it a swirl to start the carbonisation process.
4. Don’t try to start the carbonisation process in the Fermzilla but use another bucket to put the beer, priming sugar (yeast/trub or not) and bottle it from there?
Having put the priming sugar into the beer, when do I start bottling? Immediately, the next day, the next week? Or some other time?
If I do put back some trub or make a new yeast mixture how much do I pitch - I guess it wouldn’t take much and would cider yeast do the job or would I be better to reserve a small amount of the original dried yeast specifically for this purpose and, if so, how much.
One final question, do I need to use a full pack of yeast when I initially start the process - I am using Mangrove Jack’s M36.
Many thanks
Bill
I am getting ready to brew my first all grain batch, using a Grainfather 30 and fermenting in a Fermzilla 27 litre without pressurisation. This is also my first batch of home brew since about 1980 when I made a few kit batches. Once I take the fermentation to the point where all the yeast has finished doing its job I can then take out all the trub. But if I do that how do I then get my priming sugar to bring about carbonisation in the bottles as I will have removed the yeast (I believe).
So, at the end of the fermentation period do I...
1. Leave the trub in the Fermzilla, add the priming sugar solution and hope the yeast in the trub does the job of carbonising the beer (but then I would not be in a position to ensure that the priming sugar has evenly distributed through the beer)
2. Take off the trub, add the priming sugar to the Fermzilla, give it a swirl round and hope there is enough residual yeast in the beer to make the carbonisation work.
3. Take off the trub, add the priming sugar solution to the Fermzilla, at the same time adding a little (how much?) trub back in and give it a swirl to start the carbonisation process.
4. Don’t try to start the carbonisation process in the Fermzilla but use another bucket to put the beer, priming sugar (yeast/trub or not) and bottle it from there?
Having put the priming sugar into the beer, when do I start bottling? Immediately, the next day, the next week? Or some other time?
If I do put back some trub or make a new yeast mixture how much do I pitch - I guess it wouldn’t take much and would cider yeast do the job or would I be better to reserve a small amount of the original dried yeast specifically for this purpose and, if so, how much.
One final question, do I need to use a full pack of yeast when I initially start the process - I am using Mangrove Jack’s M36.
Many thanks
Bill