Rawshark
New Member
Hi all
First time brewer here. So I’ve been brewing a Young’s APA kit and need to know if I can rescue it.
For the most part it all went well. I fermented it, siphoned into a pressure keg and let it sit for a week or so as per the instructions.
The problem I think came in the next step which advised me to move the keg somewhere “cool and dark” for a few weeks. “Nowhere cooler or darker than a fridge” I thought. So it’s been in a fridge at about 5 degrees for the last three weeks or so.
I tested the beer and while it tastes ok, it is flat as hell and can’t develop a head no matter how you pour it. After checking online I reckon it’s because I knocked the yeast out by keeping it too cold. (I’m an idiot, by the way).
I’ve since taken it out of the fridge in the hope a warmer atmosphere and a bit of a shake might wake the yeast back up. Is this a lost cause and one to chock up to experience, or can something be salvaged?
Thanks!
First time brewer here. So I’ve been brewing a Young’s APA kit and need to know if I can rescue it.
For the most part it all went well. I fermented it, siphoned into a pressure keg and let it sit for a week or so as per the instructions.
The problem I think came in the next step which advised me to move the keg somewhere “cool and dark” for a few weeks. “Nowhere cooler or darker than a fridge” I thought. So it’s been in a fridge at about 5 degrees for the last three weeks or so.
I tested the beer and while it tastes ok, it is flat as hell and can’t develop a head no matter how you pour it. After checking online I reckon it’s because I knocked the yeast out by keeping it too cold. (I’m an idiot, by the way).
I’ve since taken it out of the fridge in the hope a warmer atmosphere and a bit of a shake might wake the yeast back up. Is this a lost cause and one to chock up to experience, or can something be salvaged?
Thanks!