Garth wrote:monk wrote:For the last few months I've been leaving the ale in primary (glass carboy) for 14-21 days, then bottling and waiting a few weeks.
It seems to work great for me.
Monk
me too Monk, I've had some mega clear beer recently, I usually do 2 1/2 weeks in the primary, bottle it then leave it in the warm for 2 weeks, then move to the cool... sometimes the last stage dosen't last too long............
Yeah, I started doing this because I was trying to simplify and read about a certain fancy-pants brewer (who wins all sorts of competitions and is semi-famous) who "never uses a secondary, unless it's a lager or a fruit beer". Now, the funny part is, I read another article by a different "renowned" homebrewer, and he specifically cited his use of a secondary as being a great help in making great beers. It just goes to show that a lot a folks use a lot of different techniques to make great beer. I've come to think that you should always take advice with a grain of salt and get first hand experience before you decide to start doing things a certain way. Different things work for different systems.
I don't know if this TV show ever played in the UK, but when I was growing up, we had a show in the US called MacGuyver, about an action hero guy who always ended up getting into a sticky situation and escaping by making a bomb out of some random crap (a popsicle, 4 mice, and toothpick--okay, not THAT ridiculous). Whenever I homebrew, I still get the MacGuyver feel, like I can't believe I'm making delicious beer in my kitchen, letting it ferment in a plastic bucket in my closet. That's, perhaps, what I love most about brewing.
Sorry for the long post.
monk