how long after bottling

Discuss making up beer kits - the simplest way to brew.
Post Reply
pongobilly

how long after bottling

Post by pongobilly » Tue Feb 20, 2007 9:53 pm

once i have bottled my beer and its been in the warm for a week, will it taste ok to drink or will it need a couple of weeks in the cool to mature more, when we say cool how cool do we store the beer, can there be a too cold point for storing beer, say for instance how do we keep beer cool in the summer without putting in the fridge

pongobilly

Post by pongobilly » Wed Feb 21, 2007 4:14 pm

oh thats a shame, i dont fancy stopping brewing in the summer, maybe ill move onto wine for the summer, whats the other options?????

mysterio

Post by mysterio » Wed Feb 21, 2007 6:49 pm

I do some lagers in the fridge and ales in a large bucket of water topped up with ice or cold water indoors.

SiHoltye

Post by SiHoltye » Mon May 21, 2007 10:44 pm

I've just put a batch of midas touch in the spare fridge I've got for cool maturation. Is 5°C too low/what effect would this have does anyone think?

BarryNL

Post by BarryNL » Mon May 21, 2007 11:01 pm

pongobilly wrote:oh thats a shame, i dont fancy stopping brewing in the summer, maybe ill move onto wine for the summer, whats the other options?????
Twenty quid for a secondhand fridge, plus about the same for an external thermostat to keep it at 13 degrees.

That's basically what I have, although it has to do double duty of keeping the fermentation correct too, so maybe a third fridge is also in order :-k

ColinKeb

Post by ColinKeb » Tue May 22, 2007 9:26 am

DaaB wrote:Some people use a fridge with a replacement thermostat to keep fermentation at the right temperature.

RS sell one that allows you to ferment ales and lagers and also allows you to adjust to cellar temperatures.
who is/are RS Daab?

Stonch

Post by Stonch » Tue May 22, 2007 10:28 am

BarryNL wrote:
pongobilly wrote:oh thats a shame, i dont fancy stopping brewing in the summer, maybe ill move onto wine for the summer, whats the other options?????
Twenty quid for a secondhand fridge, plus about the same for an external thermostat to keep it at 13 degrees.

That's basically what I have, although it has to do double duty of keeping the fermentation correct too, so maybe a third fridge is also in order :-k
Sounds like a slippery slope. Seriously though, I'm miserable about having to stop brewing for summer. Must get a few on the go before then!

TODAY'S OUR THIRD BREW DAY!!

delboy

Post by delboy » Tue May 22, 2007 12:14 pm

You could always ferments some summer beers like hefe weizens and belgian farmhouse saissons with these yeasts high temps isn't necessarily a bad thing (i wish i had somewhere warmer to ferment my hefe).

jaytee1

Post by jaytee1 » Tue May 22, 2007 12:49 pm

Stonch wrote:
BarryNL wrote:
pongobilly wrote:oh thats a shame, i dont fancy stopping brewing in the summer, maybe ill move onto wine for the summer, whats the other options?????
Twenty quid for a secondhand fridge, plus about the same for an external thermostat to keep it at 13 degrees.

That's basically what I have, although it has to do double duty of keeping the fermentation correct too, so maybe a third fridge is also in order :-k
Sounds like a slippery slope. Seriously though, I'm miserable about having to stop brewing for summer. Must get a few on the go before then!

TODAY'S OUR THIRD BREW DAY!!
good luck stonch on your third brew day, looking forward to the blog.
Dont you have access to cellar?? You could always ferment in there with an immersion heater

BarryNL

Post by BarryNL » Tue May 22, 2007 1:32 pm

jaytee1 wrote: good luck stonch on your third brew day, looking forward to the blog.
Dont you have access to cellar?? You could always ferment in there with an immersion heater
There are options - Brewferm kits, for example, suggest a room temperature of 25 degrees :!:

..and Wyeast #3068 Weihenstephan seems to produce some nice wheatbeers at the same temperatures.

Others with good max. temperatures include:

1099 Whitbread Ale Yeast - 24 deg.
1214 Belgian Ale Yeast - 24 deg.
1728 Scottish Ale Yeast - 24 deg.
3522 Belgian Ardennes Yeast - 29 deg. :!:
3724 Belgian Saison Yeast - 29 deg. :!:
3787 Trappist High Gravity - 25 deg.

I'm sure you can brew something.

jaytee1

Post by jaytee1 » Tue May 22, 2007 1:48 pm

Good work Barry, thats good to know :D

ColinKeb

Post by ColinKeb » Tue May 22, 2007 2:53 pm

DaaB wrote:Purveyors of the finest stuff to the trade RS Catalogue
cheers :D i had one look and thought "out of my depth :shock: " i will seriously consider thsi route as i cant do without brewing through the summer . youd think with global warming etc someone would have thoguth to breed a yeast that operates at higher temperatures ! :D

SiHoltye

Post by SiHoltye » Tue May 22, 2007 4:37 pm

Can anyone think why 5°C might harm the second maturation process? It's just the yeast dropping right out isn't it? Should the lower temp speed clearing up?

Stonch

Post by Stonch » Tue May 22, 2007 4:39 pm

SiHoltye wrote:Can anyone think why 5°C might harm the second maturation process? It's just the yeast dropping right out isn't it? Should the lower temp speed clearing up?
Good question. And while we're at it, how does the converse situation work - is there any harm in maturing at the same temp as primary fermentation, other than the fact it'll take longer to drop bright?

Post Reply