Seems like a dead-ish thread but just thought I'd thank you all, I read this from start to finish before beginning brewing and have adjusted my standard approach accordingly.
Day 1: make 23L wort, pitch yeast, ferment at 20°.
Day 14: dry hop
Day 21: rack to secondary and cold crash
Day 28: prime and bottle, keep at 20°.
Day 42: cold condition at 6°
Day 63 onwards: drink
The 1050 OG means a fairly hefty 6% if all goes to plan, but also lots of suspended yeast, hence the secondary and cold crash, as I really dislike agitated yeast in a bottle. Seems this is also one of the causes of over-priming.
I like a hoppy smelling beer, hence the late addition, although it'll probably die off a little in the two weeks pre-bottling.
I'm surprised the wort is so fermentable as I didn't brew short. I'll have to keep an eye on the airlock as there's not much room left in the vessel for the wort to do its usual knicker-twisting. The only question mark is the ferment temperature of 20°, which I may need to drop for the above reason.
Cheers
Day 1: make 23L wort, pitch yeast, ferment at 20°.
Day 14: dry hop
Day 21: rack to secondary and cold crash
Day 28: prime and bottle, keep at 20°.
Day 42: cold condition at 6°
Day 63 onwards: drink
The 1050 OG means a fairly hefty 6% if all goes to plan, but also lots of suspended yeast, hence the secondary and cold crash, as I really dislike agitated yeast in a bottle. Seems this is also one of the causes of over-priming.
I like a hoppy smelling beer, hence the late addition, although it'll probably die off a little in the two weeks pre-bottling.
I'm surprised the wort is so fermentable as I didn't brew short. I'll have to keep an eye on the airlock as there's not much room left in the vessel for the wort to do its usual knicker-twisting. The only question mark is the ferment temperature of 20°, which I may need to drop for the above reason.
Cheers