alhenderson
Active Member
Since I'm down to the dregs of my last brew (Young's American Pale Ale - which was rather nice), figured I'd better start the next one. Had a couple of hours spare this afternoon so got it going. The APA was a fairly easy beer to make so I have high hopes for this one too (that's gone and cursed it now!). I love the likes of Goose Island IPA etc so hoping this will taste similar and save me a fortune :smile:
With my previous two brews I have struggled with temperature control during fermentation, have just had to choose a room in the house and cross my fingers. Having seen a few posts on here, I have a water bath and an aquarium heater this time to try and improve that. Fermentation for my last couple took a fair bit longer than expected due to the temperature - hoping to avoid that this time. Mind you, I'm not 100% convinced that the aquarium heater's working yet - there's no light on it to indicate anything. Time will tell.
Anyway, quick pic of the FV - not the most exciting thing in the world!
beer by Alistair Henderson, on Flickr
One other thing I would be interested in is any tips for bottling. My first brew went into a keg, for the second I used 2l water bottles which did the job fine. The first pint that I poured from a bottle was gorgeous and clear, but subsequent ones were cloudy due to having stirred up the sediment. Are there any little tricks to getting more than one clear pour from a bottle?
Cheers,
Al.
With my previous two brews I have struggled with temperature control during fermentation, have just had to choose a room in the house and cross my fingers. Having seen a few posts on here, I have a water bath and an aquarium heater this time to try and improve that. Fermentation for my last couple took a fair bit longer than expected due to the temperature - hoping to avoid that this time. Mind you, I'm not 100% convinced that the aquarium heater's working yet - there's no light on it to indicate anything. Time will tell.
Anyway, quick pic of the FV - not the most exciting thing in the world!
beer by Alistair Henderson, on Flickr
One other thing I would be interested in is any tips for bottling. My first brew went into a keg, for the second I used 2l water bottles which did the job fine. The first pint that I poured from a bottle was gorgeous and clear, but subsequent ones were cloudy due to having stirred up the sediment. Are there any little tricks to getting more than one clear pour from a bottle?
Cheers,
Al.