Yeast on top of wort

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Raife

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I’m a new brewer and my pale ale has been fermenting for three days now. Looks like all of the yeast is sitting on top. Is this normal ?
 
Yes the yeast used for Ales is generally a top fermenter opposed to a Lager style which are bottom fermenters.
So it should have a thick foamy layer on top which will die down and drop to the bottom as fermentation finishes.
Ps welcome to the forum
 
I’m a new brewer and my pale ale has been fermenting for three days now. Looks like all of the yeast is sitting on top. Is this normal ?
A picture from Sam Smith's (although typical homebrew yeasts tend not to be quite so vigorously on top) :
1686472490325.png
 
Don't some breweries introduce oxygen to the beer as part of the flavour how they do that in a controlled manner I do not know as if most of us tried it we would oxidise the beer too much
 
I'm having another go at the original Thomas Hardy ale recipe from lets brew wednesday on SUABP website. The super high gravity yeast produces as impressive a barm as the Sam smiths ( to scale) now 8 days in the darker yeast on the surface should it be skimmed or stirred back in or just left?

It's still got a bit to go down from 1.126 to 1.044 so far, last time it stopped around 1.036 and I went to secondary. I'm still waiting for an anniversary taste, couple of months to go.
 

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This question is a personal choice. I would leave it. But I am a low intervention brewer. Others will say skim.
Whatever you do, it will all settle out and clear on its own with time and gravity.
 

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