Slow fermentation... or is it?

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Feb 24, 2024
Messages
40
Reaction score
35
Location
Larbert
Another newbie question (will they ever end? šŸ¤£) ... just wondering how slow is slow fermentation, and is this something I should be worried about? Pretty much all my brews have pretty rapid fermentation, and it's all done and dusted within 4-5 days of kick-off. This one seems to have slowed down and is just plodding along, albeit still making progress.

1000021966.png

For reference, this is a 23L batch with WLP Monastery Ale Yeast, around 7.5kg of malt and a kilo of Belgian candi. This is the largest amount of malt I've ever used in one batch, and I wondered whether that might have something to do with the slow-down on the fermentation - too much sugar? Is that a thing?
 
Too much sugar isn't a thing, otherwise wine making wouldn't happen. To be fair though, some yeasts don't have very high alcohol tolerance (hence wine yeast), but that wouldn't be the case here.

There are likely some unfermantable sugars in there from crystal malts for example, but that would be intentional to add more body. This would be reflected in your expected FG.

It's not even been a week, your beer is likely to need two weeks minimum to finish out.
 
As other's have said, leave it for now. With a beer with such a high starting gravity I'd expect it to take a little longer to ferment out.

One question I do have is what quantity of yeast did you pitch? I would have used two packs of the WLP yeast for a beer with that starting gravity. If you used less then it may result in a slower than desired fermentation.
 
As other's have said, leave it for now. With a beer with such a high starting gravity I'd expect it to take a little longer to ferment out.

One question I do have is what quantity of yeast did you pitch? I would have used two packs of the WLP yeast for a beer with that starting gravity. If you used less then it may result in a slower than desired fermentation.
I just used one pack - I used the same yeast and quantity before for a Belgian quad and it reached 11% fairly briskly! But every brew is different and that previous one had Belgian candi and brewing sugar in fairly hefty quantities. I'm not in a hurry for it to finish, and as long as it's healthy I'm happy. Good to know for the future tho'. šŸ‘šŸ»
 
Back
Top