Dulwich North
Active Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2020
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Is there an obvious reason why two Dunkelweizen fermentations might stop early, at 1.022 in one case and now 1.027 in another?
The respective OGs were 1.056 and 1.060, and in each case the fermentation appeared to bubble away normally for a couple of days, but hadn't progressed fully when I checked gravity on days 7 and 14. Temperature has been in the 22-25C range. I tried adding more yeast to the first one, but FG only went to 1.022.
While I bottled the first one in February, the bottles haven't improved with age - too thick, too sweet - and I don't know why I don't just pour the rest away. I'm not sure it's even worth bottling the current one and am not sure it could be rescued. Are Dunkelweizens particularly prone to this problem? Or should I just go back to the GH book recipe which turned out perfect last year?
This was the grain used for both failed efforts:
43% German - Dark Wheat
16% Munich Dark 20L
25% German - Bohemian Pilsner
5% German - CaraMunich I
5% Belgian - Special B
5% United Kingdom - Chocolate
The respective OGs were 1.056 and 1.060, and in each case the fermentation appeared to bubble away normally for a couple of days, but hadn't progressed fully when I checked gravity on days 7 and 14. Temperature has been in the 22-25C range. I tried adding more yeast to the first one, but FG only went to 1.022.
While I bottled the first one in February, the bottles haven't improved with age - too thick, too sweet - and I don't know why I don't just pour the rest away. I'm not sure it's even worth bottling the current one and am not sure it could be rescued. Are Dunkelweizens particularly prone to this problem? Or should I just go back to the GH book recipe which turned out perfect last year?
This was the grain used for both failed efforts:
43% German - Dark Wheat
16% Munich Dark 20L
25% German - Bohemian Pilsner
5% German - CaraMunich I
5% Belgian - Special B
5% United Kingdom - Chocolate