|
2 registered (JSSTR8, MacBill44),
0
Guests and
13
Spiders online. |
|
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
CURRENT BOTM
MAY 2012
natural320
|
|
3868 Members
35 Forums
19421 Topics
270692 Posts
Max Online: 196 @ 06/11/11 07:04 PM
|
|
|
#251050 - 01/05/12 05:42 PM
Secondary Fermentor Question
|
Newbie
Registered: 12/22/11
Posts: 14
|
So I am thinking I want to try using a secondary fermentor to clear up the beer a bit more. My question is, how long should I leave it in the primmary fermentor before switching it to the secondary fermentor, and also how long should I leave it in the secondary fermentor for? Thanks!
_________________________
Conditioning: Irish Stout Carbing: Honey Wheat Brewing: High Country Canadian Draft
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#251057 - 01/05/12 06:28 PM
Re: Secondary Fermentor Question
[Re: Dane]
|
Newbie
Registered: 12/22/11
Posts: 14
|
So you mean I could kill two birds with one stone? BRILLIANT!!! Thanks for the advice.
_________________________
Conditioning: Irish Stout Carbing: Honey Wheat Brewing: High Country Canadian Draft
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#251071 - 01/05/12 08:05 PM
Re: Secondary Fermentor Question
[Re: Drinkalot]
|
Ultimate Mr. Beer Fan
  
Registered: 10/28/08
Posts: 2802
Loc: Columbus, GA
|
+1 Dane
My buddy still does transfers, despite me telling him it wasn't necessary. It's more like a habit for him. It's really a matter of personal preference, IMO. Unless you do it (and try doing it without), you won't really know if it is a part of YOUR brewing process.
I personally only transfer if I'm going to dry hop. I transferred my lager, but that was so I could get after the yeast for washing.
And my wife is catching onto the lingo and process, so I find it difficult to "trick" her in this way.
_________________________
Brewing Since: 10/12/08
Fermenting: Wheat IPA Carbing: Ordinary Bitter Conditioning: Standard Lager, Vienna, MaiBock Drinking: Best Bitter, 1885 Scottish IP, Dry Stout, 80/-, Harp clone, Braggot On Deck: Scottish 60/-
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#252823 - 01/18/12 05:48 PM
Re: Secondary Fermentor Question
[Re: JSSTR8]
|
Beer, beer, beer, tiddly beer!
Active Member
Registered: 01/02/11
Posts: 46
Loc: Bay Area, CA
|
Transferring to a second keg for bottling will probably do as much for you. Rack the beer to the second keg leaving behind the trub, add all your priming sugar boiled in a small amount of water, and bottle it up. Agreed! I bottle in the kitchen, so I pull out the fermenter and set it up 1-2 days before (to let it resettle a little), then batch prime in a bottling bucket. I've had a Kolsch and Munich Helles you could nearly read through, and a few amber batches that were also pretty clear. The yeast type matters as well. Not just low vs high flocculation, but you should try different yeasts to get a feel for HOW they flocculate, not just HOW MUCH. Some yeasts drop out really well but any movement at all (including lifting a bottle to pour it) causes it to loosen and chunk up. Some take longer to drop out, but once they do they stay put. My clearest beers have had at 3-4 weeks in primary, no secondary, bottle from a separate bucket, and sit in the bottles for 6+ weeks. All depends on your schedule and personal preference (and patience), but overall the longer you let it sit at any particular step, the clearer the end result will be.
_________________________
Next: [ Oktoberfest Ale ] Ferm: [ MoreBeer Bock ][ Cinco Cervesa ] Carb/Cond: [ Feb ROTM: Best Bitter ] Drink: Gone: [ Coriander Hefeweizen ][ Cherry Wheat ][ Irish Red Ale ][ Oatmeal Stout ][ Nut Brown Ale ][ Kyle's Odiferous Holiday Ale ][ Draught Pub Ale ][ Munich Helles I ][ Señor Chang Vienna Lager ][ American Kolsch ][ Clone: Lagunitas IPA ][ Weak Winter Warmer ][ Milk Stout I ] [ Coriander Hefeweizen ] [ American IPA ][ Oktoberfest Ale ][ Honey Blonde ][ Scottish Wee Heavy I ][ ESB II ][ Low Maintenance Blonde ][ ESB I ][ Black Tower Porter, Creamy Brown UME, Golding ][ Englishman's Nut Brown Ale, Mellow Amber UME, Perle ][ Bavarian Hefeweizen (DME, Perle) ][ Irish Red Ale ][ Sticky Wicket Oatmeal Stout, Creamy Brown UME, Saaz ][ Bavarian Hefeweizen (DME, Saaz) ][ West Coast Pale Ale ]
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#252835 - 01/18/12 06:38 PM
Re: Secondary Fermentor Question
[Re: Tiddly Beer]
|
I'm the white rabbit.
Brewmeister Dubbel
  
Registered: 12/17/09
Posts: 12000
Loc: Brooklyn, NY
|
With some yeasts that like to drop out early (I'm looking at you, Wyeast 1968 ESB!), racking to a secondary can help wake the yeasties up and get them to finish out, when otherwise rocking the primary fermentor wouldn't. This is really only an issue if you're bottling...in which case, the lazy yeasties might wake back up in the bottle, finish fermenting the wort those last few points, AND eat all the priming sugar...leading to overcarbed beer. This has lead me to have a mild that I bottled for swaps to be carbed more like a hefe...I might've been to style with zero priming sugar, and just letting the yeasties finish out in the bottles.  So, now, when using a super-flocculant yeast like Wyeast 1968, I rack to a cornie for secondary, seal the lid and let it sit in the warm for a couple of days before I put it in the kegerator. This lets it finish fermenting out, and often is enough to carb a british beer to style.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
 New to brewing? The following videos will help you make sense of your new hobby. The videos will walk you through every step of the process—from sanitizing to bottling and everything in between.
|
|
|