Don't Assume your beer is stuck
Posted: Wed Aug 07, 2019 7:58 am
I once had a beer that fermented dry quite literally overnight.
I pitched yeast, the next morning checked and said Hrmm, the yeast did nothing. I mean it did NOTHING, just a bucket of raw unchaged fluid. I stirred it up to make sure I didn't oversulphite and kill the pitched yeast again, and checked later that afternoon. Again nothing. Hrm...
Somehow I decided to check the Specific gravity....oh...What the heck? It's dry? It from pitched to dry and without evidence of developing a foam in less than 12 hours, no CO2 smell, no nothing evidence wise.
That was a surprise, so don't assume it's stuck, check to see if maybe it's just a miracle and already complete.
That beer ended up being pretty good too. I thought it might have been ruined from a fast and furious ferment, but it was still good.
I pitched yeast, the next morning checked and said Hrmm, the yeast did nothing. I mean it did NOTHING, just a bucket of raw unchaged fluid. I stirred it up to make sure I didn't oversulphite and kill the pitched yeast again, and checked later that afternoon. Again nothing. Hrm...
Somehow I decided to check the Specific gravity....oh...What the heck? It's dry? It from pitched to dry and without evidence of developing a foam in less than 12 hours, no CO2 smell, no nothing evidence wise.
That was a surprise, so don't assume it's stuck, check to see if maybe it's just a miracle and already complete.
That beer ended up being pretty good too. I thought it might have been ruined from a fast and furious ferment, but it was still good.