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Hi,My 1st post query.After fermentation has stopped,say 5-6 days,how long is too long to let settle & clear?Do you still add sugar to bottles or kegs later?
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Hey Trev, if you have a second fermentor you could transfer the beer to the secondary. This takes the beer of the trub and yeast (called leas - not sure I have spelled that correctly) at the bottom of the fermentor which can start to give your beer off flavours if left too long. I wouldn't be concerned for any time less than a week, a fortnight is pushing it, three weeks you will have some additional flavours. From my experience anyway.
I usually bottle or keg when my beer reaches its final gravity (hydrometer reading), if I dont have time to bottle it I often shift them to a secondary. Once its off the leas it can sit in the secondary for months and clear or as long as it takes.
You can bulk prime with sugar in the secondary or bottle and add sugar per bottle. The additional sugar at this stage is to condition it in the bottle so it has some carbonation when you open it.
You get off flavours from the breakdown of vegetative matter too, not just the yeast. Its this that might give you off flavours, especially if it in an ambient temp shed at this time of year. I wouldn't recommend 3 weeks in the primary fermentor unless you have it in some kind of controlled environment where the temperature is stable.
Do you have any articles on the current understanding sockmerchant, I'd be interested to read up on that, I'm currently reading through a mountain of yeast books and articles, any insightful new ones are welcome.
Personally I keep it in the fermentor from 1-2 weeks and bottle it or keg from there. If its not clear I usually bottle of keg anyway and it will settle out. I'm very patient with my beers. If its really cloudy, still not completed its fermentation or I just don't have time I will rack to a secondary. I am not concerned about more risk of infection, if you work cleanly its not a problem.
mainly "Yeast" by the white labs dudes.
And a hundred or so hours of listening to the brewing network podcasts.
Well, that and personal experience of course. After a week of temp control i pretty much let things go and then maybe crash cool at the end to clear it up if it hasnt. This being ales of course. I can honestly say i have never had (or at the very least detected) off flavours from being on yeast (and vegetative matter) for up to a month.
Everything i have read and heard say that you only do primary, and to only do secondary if you are adding stuff (fruit, oak, etc etc) or doing long term fermentation (barley wine, sours, etc etc).
Interesting, I'll have to look up the podcasts. I only just finished the biology section of Yeast so a good few chapters to go. Maybe I just get more hop through to the fermentor than you but I can get off flavours if its left too long on the lees so I just don't leave it. I'll be gutted if I am making a really good beer when it could have been an outstanding beer!
I've only ever had positive results from racking to a secondary, usually glass which helps to see whats going on. Be interesting to find out what the benefits are from leaving it in the primary.
I use primary fermentor only and then bottle. I leave my ales in the fermentor for 2 weeks before bottling and my lagers stay in for 3 weeks due to colder fermentation temp. Seems to work well for me.
Thanks guys,appreciate your help
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