Lazy brewer.
Lazy brewer.
Ive been kit brewing for a little while now and the beer has been ok.
Lately as i work 6 days a week i realy only get to do this stuff on the sunday so this is what i do.
Brew a kit on a sunday & leave it in the primary fermenter untill i rack it to another fermenter the following sunday. (stopped brewing after 4-5 days)
Then leave it in this secondary fermenter untill the next sunday then bottle.
It just seems weird to leave the beer so long after the fermenting has stopped.
Do you guys see any problems with this ?
Lately as i work 6 days a week i realy only get to do this stuff on the sunday so this is what i do.
Brew a kit on a sunday & leave it in the primary fermenter untill i rack it to another fermenter the following sunday. (stopped brewing after 4-5 days)
Then leave it in this secondary fermenter untill the next sunday then bottle.
It just seems weird to leave the beer so long after the fermenting has stopped.
Do you guys see any problems with this ?
Two weeks hey, i thought its best to remove the beer from the yeast cake soon as & then let settle in the secondary.Jeff wrote:No, I reckon you're doing well. I leave mine in the primary for two weeks. Maybe you could do that then rack off for another week. This should remove even more sediment
Not that im an expert.

The less sediment the better i recon.
Yeah but im at the point were i brew more than i drink so i dont mind waiting, especialy if it may improve the beer.r.magnay wrote:If I spent that much time waiting for my beer to be ready, I would need half a dozen fermenters!
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It is only needed to remove beer from yeast in primary when the temperature is hot such like 25 deg Celcius. If the fermentation is kept "cool" being in the low of 20s, then the yeast will reabsorb some of its by products as well as fall out of the beer.
It is a old homebrew myth that the beer should be rushed into the bottle. This problem is not there when the fermentation is good and cool. First things to learn for kit people is to practice good sanitation always and control temperature suitable for the yeast. Do these things and many silly myths shall go.
It is a old homebrew myth that the beer should be rushed into the bottle. This problem is not there when the fermentation is good and cool. First things to learn for kit people is to practice good sanitation always and control temperature suitable for the yeast. Do these things and many silly myths shall go.
I keep my primary down to around 24 to 26 deg as i keep it 1/2 submerged with water & ice blocks but the secondary is left at room temp approx 30 deg (north QLD) on the bench ready for bottling.Hrundi V Bakshi wrote:It is only needed to remove beer from yeast in primary when the temperature is hot such like 25 deg Celcius. If the fermentation is kept "cool" being in the low of 20s, then the yeast will reabsorb some of its by products as well as fall out of the beer.
Would a higher temp realy make that much difference ?
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Do you rack the beer for secondary or leave it on the yeast cake?Kev wrote: I keep my primary down to around 24 to 26 deg as i keep it 1/2 submerged with water & ice blocks but the secondary is left at room temp approx 30 deg (north QLD) on the bench ready for bottling.
Would a higher temp realy make that much difference ?
The problem with leaving the beer on the yeast at these temperatures is that the yeast will still be alive and active but out of fermentable sugars, so they will turn to the cells of their dead bretheren

It is not a problem at lower temperatures and different strains of yeast are behave differently. There is no "rule". If your beer tastes good, then you should

Yeah as said i leave it in the primary for one week then rack to the secondary for another week.Hrundi V Bakshi wrote: Do you rack the beer for secondary or leave it on the yeast cake?
There is a little bit of sediment in the secondary (of course) but i hope this isnt enough to cause the problems you discussed with the higher temps.
racking
i never have racked befor. how is it done? do u run beer through tap or pour out through top?
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Pelican,
If no one helps you out I will try. Our kit is different which is why I hope someone else will stand up to the plate. Your cry has been heard though
Dogger
If no one helps you out I will try. Our kit is different which is why I hope someone else will stand up to the plate. Your cry has been heard though
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
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Pelican,
Racking is simply the transferring of the fermented or almost fermented beer to another fermenter. This leaves behind all the dead yeast and other crap that some people say will affect the taste of the beer if it's left in the original fermenter.
If you have a fermenter with a tap, get a bit of tube (see http://www.homebrewandbeer.com/forum/vi ... .php?t=602) that's long enough to go from the fermenter tap to the bottom of the second fermenter. The reason you need the tube is that just letting the beer run from one fermenter into another will admit oxygen, and this will likely lead to oxidation of the beer, which isn't good. You just want the beer to run in gently.
If your fermenter doesn't have a tap, you'll need to siphon it from one fermenter to the other.
Racking also allows you to bulk prime, which means you don't have to add sugar to each bottle to prime. Do a search and you'll come up with heaps of info.
Cheers,
Oliver
Racking is simply the transferring of the fermented or almost fermented beer to another fermenter. This leaves behind all the dead yeast and other crap that some people say will affect the taste of the beer if it's left in the original fermenter.
If you have a fermenter with a tap, get a bit of tube (see http://www.homebrewandbeer.com/forum/vi ... .php?t=602) that's long enough to go from the fermenter tap to the bottom of the second fermenter. The reason you need the tube is that just letting the beer run from one fermenter into another will admit oxygen, and this will likely lead to oxidation of the beer, which isn't good. You just want the beer to run in gently.
If your fermenter doesn't have a tap, you'll need to siphon it from one fermenter to the other.
Racking also allows you to bulk prime, which means you don't have to add sugar to each bottle to prime. Do a search and you'll come up with heaps of info.
Cheers,
Oliver
Pelican, I've just bottled a nut brown. For the first time I racked into another container (see above), using a 1m piece of clear plastic hose purchased at the same establishment. The hose reaches to the bottom of the secondary. I left it a few days for any "stirred up" sediment to drop out then bulk primed with 110g of sugar. A small residue remained in the secondary, leading me to think the final beer may be clearer
The main gain however was in the bulk priming which allowed me to put 23 litres away in less than an hour
Give it a go!

The main gain however was in the bulk priming which allowed me to put 23 litres away in less than an hour

Give it a go!
Life is too short to drink crap
Kev, its expensive, I checked the price of the drops (not to extensivly) and the cheapest I could find was coopers drops at kmart for $2.50 for a 250g bag (didn't look for bigger bags), this is $10 a kilo for sugar. dextrose can be got at around $2.70 a kilo. If you prime at 8gm per litre your looking at under 50c for priming. Also you have more flexibility with doing it without drops, can make em more smooth or fizzy depending on what you want