Don't feel bad Don, I came home from Nashville this evening to a mess in the garage. either my yeast pitch was too large or my headspace was too small, either or, it's still spewing. I built a tent of plastic over it to keep it off the walls and ceiling.Don wrote:I guess I need to go back to FugglesDwayne_Delaney wrote:Don, did you run out of Fuggles??
Looked what happened after @ 10 hours
What's in your fermenter??
- ArtCox
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 334
- Joined: Sun Jan 09, 2011 3:13 pm
- Location: Madisonville, Ky
Re: What's in your fermenter??
"If you can't stand the hops, get out of the brewhouse!"
Next Brew:
Primary:
Secondary: Seven C's of Rye
Bottled:
On Tap: SMaSH Mouth Vinnie
Upcoming Brews: Gumball Machine, Lil Irish Redhead, "Fat Bastard" Heavy Scottish Ale, Bonzai Rye,
Next Brew:
Primary:
Secondary: Seven C's of Rye
Bottled:
On Tap: SMaSH Mouth Vinnie
Upcoming Brews: Gumball Machine, Lil Irish Redhead, "Fat Bastard" Heavy Scottish Ale, Bonzai Rye,
- sirgiovanni
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1059
- Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 8:53 am
- Location: Evansville
- Don
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1768
- Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2007 7:18 pm
- Location: Dark Side of the Moon
Re: What's in your fermenter??
There are usually a few contributing factors to a violent blow off of your airlock. First is the yeast selection. Certain yeast have a greater propensity to create a "big fluffy head". The yeast that are known for big head productions are White Labs Trappist, WLP300 Hefeweizen, and WLP002 English. Certainly the first two are the most infamous. However, once in awhile a yeast like the normally calm WLP001 California busting out of a carboy. A second factor is heat. They yeast go wild when they get hot. Fermentations above 73 degrees are candidates. Another factor is starting gravity. Higher gravity beers have more violent ferments. Sometimes a beer will start to ferment and come to a near halt shortly after starting because of a rapid drop in ambient temperature. When it suddenly becomes warm, because the weather heats up or the carboy is moved to a warmer location, it can cause a yeast breakout. If you plan on brewing with actual fruit in the primary (when lots of sugar are left) you should use a blow off . There is no hard and fast rule for when it will happen but there are certain factors that can be avoided. Don't ferment in a 5 gallon carboy with only an airlock. Keep an eye on your fermenter when in doubt.ArtCox wrote: Don't feel bad Don, I came home from Nashville this evening to a mess in the garage. either my yeast pitch was too large or my headspace was too small, either or, it's still spewing. I built a tent of plastic over it to keep it off the walls and ceiling.
Some use FERMCAP FOAM CONTROL
It's a milky liquid emulsion that reduces foaming during fermentation, without affecting heading or the flavor of the finished beer. The active food grade ingredient,dimethylpolysiloxane, reduces surface tension of the wort, enabling you to have vigorous ferments in smaller fermenters.
Fermcap settle out in the yeast sediment when fermentation ends. Use ¼ to ½ teaspoon per 5 gallon batch of beer, adding right before you add the yeast. Preserved with sodium metabisulphite. This 4 fluid oz. bottle is good for many batches and should be stored in a cool place, and shaken before each use to unify the emulsion.
I have tried this in the past. it also works to control boilovers. My brewing I plan on every batch blowing off, I watch it and keep my blowoff tube handy, the bigger the beers, or the more wheat I use, the more likely I am to go ahead and put the tube in the carboy right after pitching the yeast.
Don Heisler☮
-------------------------
Brewers make wort, yeast make beer, God is good.
-------------------------
Brewers make wort, yeast make beer, God is good.
- SkyBrew
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1641
- Joined: Mon May 31, 2010 11:47 pm
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Brewed this saturday:
Scottish 60 Shilling Ale
OG 1.031
fermentation schedule:
-- 1-2 weeks primary; 1-2 weeks secondary;
MASH INGREDIENTS
-- 5 lbs. Maris Otter
-- 1 lbs Briess Caramel 80L
MASH SCHEDULE: SINGLE INFUSION
Sacch’ Rest: 154° F for 60 minutes
Mashout: 170° F for 10 minutes
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
0.5 oz Northern Brewer (60 min)
YEAST
dry yeast:
SAFBREW S-33. Optimum temperature: 59-75°F
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
-- 0.5 oz Northern Brewer (60 min)
bottled and kegged the St. Paul Porter yesterday
OG 1.052
fermentation schedule:
-- 1.5 weeks primary; 2 weeks secondary;
MASH INGREDIENTS
-- 8.5 lbs. Rahr 2-row Pale
-- 1 lbs Simpsons Medium Crystal
-- 0.5 lb Simpsons Chocolate Malt
MASH SCHEDULE: SINGLE INFUSION
Sacch’ Rest: 152° F for 60 minutes
Mashout: 170° F for 10 minutes
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
1.5 oz. Cluster (60 min)
1 oz Cascade (1 min)
YEAST
SAFALE US-05.
Optimum temperature: 59-75°F
Now I have an open fermenter, and Im debating on trying my hand at a chili beer, anyone have any good 5 gallon all grain recipes? Not too spicy, more of a chipotle smoky flavor Im thinking
Scottish 60 Shilling Ale
OG 1.031
fermentation schedule:
-- 1-2 weeks primary; 1-2 weeks secondary;
MASH INGREDIENTS
-- 5 lbs. Maris Otter
-- 1 lbs Briess Caramel 80L
MASH SCHEDULE: SINGLE INFUSION
Sacch’ Rest: 154° F for 60 minutes
Mashout: 170° F for 10 minutes
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
0.5 oz Northern Brewer (60 min)
YEAST
dry yeast:
SAFBREW S-33. Optimum temperature: 59-75°F
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
-- 0.5 oz Northern Brewer (60 min)
bottled and kegged the St. Paul Porter yesterday
OG 1.052
fermentation schedule:
-- 1.5 weeks primary; 2 weeks secondary;
MASH INGREDIENTS
-- 8.5 lbs. Rahr 2-row Pale
-- 1 lbs Simpsons Medium Crystal
-- 0.5 lb Simpsons Chocolate Malt
MASH SCHEDULE: SINGLE INFUSION
Sacch’ Rest: 152° F for 60 minutes
Mashout: 170° F for 10 minutes
BOIL ADDITIONS & TIMES
1.5 oz. Cluster (60 min)
1 oz Cascade (1 min)
YEAST
SAFALE US-05.
Optimum temperature: 59-75°F
Now I have an open fermenter, and Im debating on trying my hand at a chili beer, anyone have any good 5 gallon all grain recipes? Not too spicy, more of a chipotle smoky flavor Im thinking
Sky B.
- Tom Wrinkles
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 160
- Joined: Mon May 24, 2010 8:47 am
- Location: Henderson
Re: What's in your fermenter??
I thought I saw a chili beer recipe in one of my BYO magazines. I will try to find it and bring it to the next meeting for you.
Tom Wrinkles
Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer.
Bottled/Kegged: Brown Ale, English Barleywine, Oatmeal Stout, Kolsch, Marzen, English Porter, Marzen,
Fermenting : ,
Next up: Saison, Belgian Blonde
Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer.
Bottled/Kegged: Brown Ale, English Barleywine, Oatmeal Stout, Kolsch, Marzen, English Porter, Marzen,
Fermenting : ,
Next up: Saison, Belgian Blonde
- sirgiovanni
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1059
- Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 8:53 am
- Location: Evansville
Re: What's in your fermenter??
I would just make a good beer and bottle it like normal but drop a fresh peper of your choice in about 6 of them when you bottle. See how it works.
What would Jesus Brew?
Jimmy
Jimmy
- john mills
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 2:40 pm
- Location: Near the Zoo
Re: What's in your fermenter??
+1 on adding a pepper to the bottle. You might even seek out dried peppers like ancho that you could toast on a dry cast iron skillet for that smoky flavor.sirgiovanni wrote:I would just make a good beer and bottle it like normal but drop a fresh peper of your choice in about 6 of them when you bottle. See how it works.
I think Cave Creek did a chili beer in the mid '90's where their gimmick was a chili pepper in the bottle. Except they didn't make a good beer to start.
You gonna buy one, or be one?
.....I'm gonna be one!
.....I'm gonna be one!
- SkyBrew
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1641
- Joined: Mon May 31, 2010 11:47 pm
Re: What's in your fermenter??
thanks John, that would be great. Good idea with experimenting with different peppers by bottling, that sounds fun, but ugh, I hate bottling, I would mutch rather do a full 5 gallon batch and keg it.
Sky B.
- john mills
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 2:40 pm
- Location: Near the Zoo
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Another way to add flavor in a controlled method would be to make a tincture (Soak some peppers in Everclear). Take a known amount of beer and add a few drops of the tincture to taste to get your drops per beer, then add the mocked up volume of tincture to the keg.
You gonna buy one, or be one?
.....I'm gonna be one!
.....I'm gonna be one!
- Don
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1768
- Joined: Wed Mar 07, 2007 7:18 pm
- Location: Dark Side of the Moon
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Just remembered I put my lager (DonWeiser) in the refrigerator on March 1st and set to 32degs. Went out and checked it and it is happily just waiting to get kegged. I don't need it till May 22nd. Is there a hurry to keg it or can I just leave it out there another couple of weeks.
It's nice and clean, clear and cold.
It's nice and clean, clear and cold.
Don Heisler☮
-------------------------
Brewers make wort, yeast make beer, God is good.
-------------------------
Brewers make wort, yeast make beer, God is good.
- Michael Erwin
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 577
- Joined: Thu May 15, 2008 2:01 pm
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Parson Brown Ale, http://bit.ly/eYwwh4
Michael Erwin
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!
- BREWsmith
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 1215
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:53 am
- Tom Wrinkles
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 160
- Joined: Mon May 24, 2010 8:47 am
- Location: Henderson
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Strawberry Blonde Ale
11.5# Cargill Special Pale
0.5# Briess Caramel 20L
1.0 oz Willamette pellet hops @60 mins.
Mash @ 152 dgrees for 75 mins. (Lost 3 degrees during entire mash)
O.G.- 1.075
Strawberry natural fruit flavoring @ bottling.
11.5# Cargill Special Pale
0.5# Briess Caramel 20L
1.0 oz Willamette pellet hops @60 mins.
Mash @ 152 dgrees for 75 mins. (Lost 3 degrees during entire mash)
O.G.- 1.075
Strawberry natural fruit flavoring @ bottling.
Tom Wrinkles
Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer.
Bottled/Kegged: Brown Ale, English Barleywine, Oatmeal Stout, Kolsch, Marzen, English Porter, Marzen,
Fermenting : ,
Next up: Saison, Belgian Blonde
Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer.
Bottled/Kegged: Brown Ale, English Barleywine, Oatmeal Stout, Kolsch, Marzen, English Porter, Marzen,
Fermenting : ,
Next up: Saison, Belgian Blonde
- Michael Erwin
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 577
- Joined: Thu May 15, 2008 2:01 pm
Re: What's in your fermenter??
Michael Erwin
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!
- Michael Erwin
- Brewmaster
- Posts: 577
- Joined: Thu May 15, 2008 2:01 pm
Re: What's in your fermenter??
my shout-out to thunderstorms and LZ -- Fool in the Rain (oatmeal stout)
brewed during today's rain...
http://bit.ly/wws-foolintherain
brewed during today's rain...
http://bit.ly/wws-foolintherain
Michael Erwin
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!
------------
Some people say the glass is half empty.
Some say it's half full.
I just want to know who's drinking my damn beer!