Kveik

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According to my records it was 1.044, now it is around 1.009-1.008. Bottling today in the evening, probably could done that last weekend, as it was already at the FG.
There was lots of krausen on the top and quite a lot of yeast at the bottom. This is from one packet that has been rehydrated. It is now in secondary fermenter since Sunday
 
According to my records it was 1.044, now it is around 1.009-1.008. Bottling today in the evening, probably could done that last weekend, as it was already at the FG.
There was lots of krausen on the top and quite a lot of yeast at the bottom. This is from one packet that has been rehydrated. It is now in secondary fermenter since Sunday

So about 80% attenuation. Thanks :hat:
 
I did use nutrient but i just added a small amount of the cheap tubs of nutrients that you get at Wilco. I guess it is probably worth paying the extra for the more specialist ones. I have never needed to add them before so this is probably where I went wrong.
Could be, I haven't actually tried making Kveik beer without. Better safe than sorry I guess. I use this one:
IMAG4006.jpg
 
The WLP version is an isolate, this might have something to do with pitching temps.

On a similar note, would pitching temp affect performance. I kind of ignored it until now and I'm wondering if this contributed to all my slow fermentations.

All yeasts could take 3-4 days to ferment really, the difference with Kveik and the rest is that you don't get the of flavours. Dr. Hans on YouTube did a video where he fermented a beer with us05 under pressure at 30 degrees. 3 days and it was done. He also said that because of the pressure he didn't get any of flavours. Not going to try this myself. I remember in my younger days, I made wine on the bathroom floor. It was about 25 degrees + warm floors. It was finished in about 3 days also, It was horrible, but it fermented from 1100 in no time. By the way, the worst headache of my life.
 
All yeasts could take 3-4 days to ferment really, the difference with Kveik and the rest is that you don't get the of flavours. Dr. Hans on YouTube did a video where he fermented a beer with us05 under pressure at 30 degrees. 3 days and it was done. He also said that because of the pressure he didn't get any of flavours. Not going to try this myself. I remember in my younger days, I made wine on the bathroom floor. It was about 25 degrees + warm floors. It was finished in about 3 days also, It was horrible, but it fermented from 1100 in no time. By the way, the worst headache of my life.
I really like Dr Hanz, I just got into his channel. I saw the video where he made a lager in 3 days in his fermentasaurus and posts it to a couple of other vloggers. Their reactions when they eat these Swedish sweets was hilarious as well. I'll have a look out for that video.

I have a fermzilla on the way, I definitely want to experiment with pressure fermenting to speed things up. I find even with healthy pitch rates my fermentations tend to take longer than average.
 
Hi for those that asked for feedback on this brew. It has turned into a bit of a nightmare. Everything went perfect with the brewing and pitching and it was bubbling steadily after 8 hrs. it looked to be going great but then stopped at 1.020. I left it a while longer and nothing. so I agitated the ferementor and upped the temp by 1c a day to 28c but still nothing. Yesterday I added some more sugar, more yeast nutrient and the Hornidal I had in the fridge. I will leave it another week and see how it goes. any ideas if this doesn't work, other than bin it? Not had a stuck ferment before so feeling a little disapointed.
I added the extra sugar, yeast and nutrient. The new sugar has been eaten by the yeast and has carbonated the beer, but it is still at 1.020 and it tastes really yeasty and horrible?
should i give up and pour it down the sink? Leave it longer? pr cpld crash and hope the yeast drops out and it is drinkable? cant figure out how to add an image but it is much lighter than the other pics
 
I really like Dr Hanz, I just got into his channel. I saw the video where he made a lager in 3 days in his fermentasaurus and posts it to a couple of other vloggers. Their reactions when they eat these Swedish sweets was hilarious as well. I'll have a look out for that video.

I have a fermzilla on the way, I definitely want to experiment with pressure fermenting to speed things up. I find even with healthy pitch rates my fermentations tend to take longer than average.

Pressure fermenting is a cool idea and all, but I have noticed a trend over the past couple of years or so. People wanting to brew faster and faster. Short boils/mash's, kveiks fermented in a week, etc. I wonder what all the rush is. I like a nice slow relaxing brew day. If I'm running out of beer I either just stop drinking until my next batch is done (gives my liver a rest) or just make a bigger batch next time so I dont run out
 
I’ve got a cherry stout planned soon but I’m not set on which strain to use.

Got a choice of, Voss, Hornindal, Midtbust, Stranda, or Aurland?

How are others finding stouts fermented with kveik?

I made a very nice no boil stout with Voss. Fermented at 35c, tastes clean and malty. Also cleared without finings. Cannot comment on the other yeasts yet, not had time to test them.
Love to know how they go when you use them?
 
Pressure fermenting is a cool idea and all, but I have noticed a trend over the past couple of years or so. People wanting to brew faster and faster. Short boils/mash's, kveiks fermented in a week, etc. I wonder what all the rush is. I like a nice slow relaxing brew day. If I'm running out of beer I either just stop drinking until my next batch is done (gives my liver a rest) or just make a bigger batch next time so I dont run out

I have found a large bucket with a long blow off tubes creates a pressurised fermentation. Not sure what the pressure would be but it's enough to expand the lid and a lot more than an airlock.
 
Pressure fermenting is a cool idea and all, but I have noticed a trend over the past couple of years or so. People wanting to brew faster and faster. Short boils/mash's, kveiks fermented in a week, etc. I wonder what all the rush is. I like a nice slow relaxing brew day. If I'm running out of beer I either just stop drinking until my next batch is done (gives my liver a rest) or just make a bigger batch next time so I dont run out
Time is money!
Also I'm very impatient. After my infection issues I have no beer. Somewhere there's about 10 bottles of brown ale I made but can't find them, and I have some imperial stout I'm saving. I want to get some mroe homebrews on the go and get my stash up quick.
 
Time is money!
Also I'm very impatient. After my infection issues I have no beer. Somewhere there's about 10 bottles of brown ale I made but can't find them, and I have some imperial stout I'm saving. I want to get some mroe homebrews on the go and get my stash up quick.

AAAArrrrgh!!! I hate that phrase. Time isn't money. Time is time and money is money. They are completely separate things!

Just think of the time whilst your building your stash as a meditation on sobriety :laugh8:
 
Pressure fermenting is a cool idea and all, but I have noticed a trend over the past couple of years or so. People wanting to brew faster and faster. Short boils/mash's, kveiks fermented in a week, etc. I wonder what all the rush is. I like a nice slow relaxing brew day. If I'm running out of beer I either just stop drinking until my next batch is done (gives my liver a rest) or just make a bigger batch next time so I dont run out

Even though I used Kveik (or psuedo kveik from cml) I didn't use to speed things up, it was mainly to see how it ferments at 25 degrees - as I needed clean yeast at that temp. My house get warm really quickly in the summer and it rarely drops below 24. I have now fermentation fridge, but it can only take one bucket ;)
So this will be my summer yeast.
I still left mine to ferment for 11 days. So yes, I don't see where is the rush. With all my hobbies time and patience is very important. And I have more beer than I can drink - I only drink maybe 3 -4 pints a week. For me it is as well about creating something and sharing it with friends.
 
AAAArrrrgh!!! I hate that phrase. Time isn't money. Time is time and money is money. They are completely separate things!

Just think of the time whilst your building your stash as a meditation on sobriety :laugh8:
lol, it's a ridiculous phrase saved for 1960s bond villains.

Sobriety?? Sounds awful!

EDIT: In all seriousness, I didn't get into homebrewing for a fast paced action packed hobby, but if I can cut down wait time from 4-5 weeks to 2-3 that would be a good result.
 
Even though I used Kveik (or psuedo kveik from cml) I didn't use to speed things up, it was mainly to see how it ferments at 25 degrees - as I needed clean yeast at that temp. My house get warm really quickly in the summer and it rarely drops below 24. I have now fermentation fridge, but it can only take one bucket ;)
So this will be my summer yeast.
I still left mine to ferment for 11 days. So yes, I don't see where is the rush. With all my hobbies time and patience is very important. And I have more beer than I can drink - I only drink maybe 3 -4 pints a week. For me it is as well about creating something and sharing it with friends.

I dont drink that much either. I enjoy laid back brew days and thinking about brewing (I've got a couple of yeast side projects on the go too, atm)
 

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