Wherry Worry
Wherry Worry
Wherry looked good after 7 seven days fermenting. Yeast activity stopped and SG 1020, and stayed there for 24hrs. The box says I need 1014 so I made a starter of some Youngs Ale Yeast and very thin activity is taking place. SG now 1019 after total of 9 days in fermenter.
How long can I leave this in the fermenter? Probably just being a newbie and worrying too much but experience is a wonderful thing.
How long can I leave this in the fermenter? Probably just being a newbie and worrying too much but experience is a wonderful thing.
Your quite safe to leave it in there for many weeks, anything up to 4 is good imo.
Your choice depends entirely on where you are planning to go from here? -
a) straight into bottles
b) into a pressure barrel
(a secondary fermentor is not really worth using with a kit)
Beer is best matured in bulk and with some yeast still in it, 4+ weeks is good (lol - if it ever lasts that long.) So if your bottling best not to rush it out of the fermentor (give it a couple of weeks in there.) If using a pressure barrel with no CO2 system best to get it in asap so it can build up a bit of pressure, you can drink it & mature it in the barrel
If it tastes good that's all that matters
Frothy
Your choice depends entirely on where you are planning to go from here? -
a) straight into bottles
b) into a pressure barrel
(a secondary fermentor is not really worth using with a kit)
Beer is best matured in bulk and with some yeast still in it, 4+ weeks is good (lol - if it ever lasts that long.) So if your bottling best not to rush it out of the fermentor (give it a couple of weeks in there.) If using a pressure barrel with no CO2 system best to get it in asap so it can build up a bit of pressure, you can drink it & mature it in the barrel

If it tastes good that's all that matters

Frothy
Thanks, I'll leave it be then. I am planning to bottle it. The fermenting bin I'm using has no tap, whereas I have another fermenter with a tap and needle valve style bottle dispenser. After 4 weeks or when happy I plan to syphon into the second bin before bottling from there. Should I think about finings (do they ever hurt) and what about priming sugars considering having left the ferment so long?
Thanks for any help.
Thanks for any help.
Finings i find are semi worth it. The ones i usually got were BEER BRITE or some youngs finings gel. I got a bottle of isinglass from the local brew shop, should be better.
My wherry was a pain to ferment, turned out ok though. It went real fast then stopped almost totally. I pitched another yeast (safale) and it finished fine.
The woodfordes yeast is infamously unrealiable.
My wherry was a pain to ferment, turned out ok though. It went real fast then stopped almost totally. I pitched another yeast (safale) and it finished fine.
The woodfordes yeast is infamously unrealiable.
Sounds good. For priming sugar use 1 tsp sugar per pint. Preferably glucose which you can get at the HBS or chemist or beer kit enhancer, spray malt etc. I think brewpacks do packs of little glucose tablets for the job.SiHoltye wrote:what about priming sugars considering having left the ferment so long?
Thanks for any help.
Wether you need finings depends on how your yeast behaves - have a look at your beer at the time & decide when you rack it to the other fermentor.
Frothy
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Just pulled out the instructions from my Woodfordes Kit(Admiral whatever0 and it states to rehydrate the yeast in boiled water at a temp of 40-45c which i think is a little high.I would normally rehydrate at 30-35cDaaB wrote:I e-mailed them a while back and I believe others have too, the proprieter of my local HB shop said she would bring it up.
If anyone has the instructions for a Woodefordes or Muntons Gold/Premium Gold kit, can they confirm what temperature they recommend rehydrating the yeast at?
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I beat somebody to a reply

This is from John Palmers how to brew
Re-hydrating Dry Yeast
1. Put 1 cup of warm (95-105F, 35-40C) boiled water into a sanitized jar and stir in the yeast. Cover with Saran Wrap and wait 15 minutes.
2. "Proof" the yeast by adding one teaspoon of extract or sugar that has been boiled in a small amount of water. Allow the sugar solution to cool before adding it to the jar.
3. Cover and place in a warm area out of direct sunlight.
4. After 30 minutes or so the yeast should be visibly churning and/or foaming, and is ready to pitch.


This is from John Palmers how to brew
Re-hydrating Dry Yeast
1. Put 1 cup of warm (95-105F, 35-40C) boiled water into a sanitized jar and stir in the yeast. Cover with Saran Wrap and wait 15 minutes.
2. "Proof" the yeast by adding one teaspoon of extract or sugar that has been boiled in a small amount of water. Allow the sugar solution to cool before adding it to the jar.
3. Cover and place in a warm area out of direct sunlight.
4. After 30 minutes or so the yeast should be visibly churning and/or foaming, and is ready to pitch.
Also Got a Wherry on the go also at the moment- it stuck at 1018 what a suprise!!!!. It's my 3rd Woodefords kit in a row which has!!! dispite using Safale 04 on the last two.
To get mine going again I stirred and added a sachet of Dry beer enzyme (on Daab's great advice!), been going well now for a further 5 days. Havn't checked the gravity yet but it's going to be pretty low. I did this for the previous Great Eastern kit which tasted great once finished.
Hope this helps
Russ
To get mine going again I stirred and added a sachet of Dry beer enzyme (on Daab's great advice!), been going well now for a further 5 days. Havn't checked the gravity yet but it's going to be pretty low. I did this for the previous Great Eastern kit which tasted great once finished.
Hope this helps
Russ
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