Brewd on the 9th, FG at 1.010 on the 17th and bottled. It has been in the fridge for 5 days so that makes it about 10 days at 22. normaly that gives me plenty of time to carb up. but maybee not this time
One way to tell is to take a gravity reading from one of your bottles. If it is more than 1010 then you know the sugar in the bottles hasn't fermented out. Personally I think it may be a perceived sweetness from the carahell - that stuff can really add a lot of mouthfeel to the brew.
Has anyone noticed that Barrett Burston Aussie Pale is a weird colour? All of my light brews with it seem to turn out almost a greyish tone? Joking would probably remember the colour of my hefe.
It was Grey for sure... but it smelled and tasted pretty damn good! I have a feeling the colour has a bit to do with the levels of protein in the malt. I've used BB before, but with Irish moss - so they turned out fine.
Just checked pre boil gravity target was 1.041 and got 1.043 with an additional litre of water. Nice straw like colour and at $14.50. If the beer turns out, I know what I will be purchasing.
you could be drinking this a fortnight. My quickest grain to brain turnover was 9 days with a pale ale. 4 day primary, 4days secondary, 1day carbonating at 3.5bar then 5 mnutes to enter the blood stream.
Permalink Reply by jt on November 12, 2008 at 8:22am
US-05 Steve ?
I used it in an extract ale, started at 15C and took itself to 18c, but that was a month ago. Ferment was a very impatient 10 days
Using it in the grain version of the same ale at the moment and I don't think I'd get it under 18C unless I put the fermenter on the concrete floor. Welly's warmed up a bit in the last month
US-05 was all I had in the fridge. Its been sitting on 18C this whole time which I'm happy enough with.
OG came out at 1.044 which was a bit annoying. Probably mostly explained by less evaporation and me upping the water volume slightly without scaling the grain.
I wonder if I can blame some of it on the low mash temp though.