Every time I take a reading and bottle, at least a shot glass to check quality Brewing should be fun.….both the hydrometer reading and the sample look good, yes ?
I didn’t try it so I’ll sample it tomorrow which is looking like bottling day
Every time I take a reading and bottle, at least a shot glass to check quality Brewing should be fun.….both the hydrometer reading and the sample look good, yes ?
I didn’t try it so I’ll sample it tomorrow which is looking like bottling day
Sample looks fine. The murkyness is probably yeast still in suspension and will do no harm. Give it a week or two at room temperature to carbonate, then the yeast will gradually drop out of suspension and the beer will clear over the following 2-4 weeks (faster if you keep it somewhere cool like the garage).does the sample look ok ie, is it typically this cloudy and murky at this stage ?
I wouldn't over think the minutiae of weighing. A little either way shown;t make a great difference. You've one u with a way of finding which method suits you best and a lite variation shouldn't matter. We are not producing a fie work of art for high end customers but a beer we want to drink. Good luck brewing and as long as you produce an enjoyably drinkable brew, nothing else really matters.All,
Apologies for the continued messages and paranoia but I’ve just measured half teaspoon of granulated sugar on my wife’s jewellery scales which are mega accurate and it comes in at 4g which appears to be twice what all the calculators advise
Am I missing something / doing something wrong ?
As mentioned I am brewing an ale and planning to bottle on Thursday in 500ml PET
One wise old brewer on this site gave me some sage advice as I agonised over the details of something or other.% this.
There is a wealth of information on these forums, all of which is valid and correct. But you can ignore all of it and eyeball everything and still make a beer that's probably 90-95% as good as obsessing over every detail.
One wise old brewer on this site gave me some sage advice as I agonised over the details of something or other.
Drink your mistakes,
Learn
move on
Brilliant advice. . I’ve made loads of mistakes and was guilty of over thinking initially. But every brew has been lovely and each time I’ve tweaked my process to improve some part of the bottling, batch priming or transfer to bottling bucket etc. 23 brews done and I’m still tweaking and learning.One wise old brewer on this site gave me some sage advice as I agonised over the details of something or other.
Drink your mistakes,
Learn
move on
Most brews taste a bit thin until they've had chase to mature in the bottle. Trust your readings to give you an accurate alcohol content and then enjoy the flavour maturing as you test your brew. If you are anything like me you'll get to the last three bottles and think 'It's just about right now'.So second gravity reading looks to be 1012 so think it’s ready….agree ?
I did have a taste and tbh it tasted weak
Is that normal ?
Yes, that's absolutely normal. The flavour matures with age, and the carbonation adds to the flavour as well.I did have a taste and tbh it tasted weak
Is that normal ?
As I said before there is another month to go before you will be drinking it. And if I was you as soon as this is bottled get another one on. And try to build up 3-5 brews at a time. That way you will have a new one going on regularly which will leave your beers longer to mature and give you a choice.So second gravity reading looks to be 1012 so think it’s ready….agree ?
I did have a taste and tbh it tasted weak
Is that normal ?
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