





nr706 wrote:And when I've made coffee stouts, I usually include the coffee in the mash. I hadn't considered adding it to the secondary, but I'll be interested in hearing how that technique works.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:My guess is that putting the coffee in secondary will leave more aromatic elements that can be blown out during the initial rush of fermentation.
lougord99 wrote:I believe the second biggest mistake is not properly scaling up your supply of yeast to overwhelm the native yeast..
Wyeast wrote:The Activator™ has a minimum of 100 billion cells of pure, ready-to-pitch yeast, plus an internal nutrient packet. The Activator™ is designed to inoculate five gallons of wort (up to 1.060 SG) providing the pitching rate recommended by professional brewers.
The PROPAGATOR™ has a minimum of 25 billion cells of pure yeast, plus an internal nutrient packet. The PROPAGATOR™ is designed to inoculate a one liter starter* before adding to five gallons of wort (up to 1.060 SG).
nr706 wrote:David,
Not to denigrate your experience, but using malt extract is really the semi-homemade version of making beer. (I'm hoping other brewers here will back me up on that.) It can still make great beer, but you're turning over the selection of malts to the company that makes the extract rather than selecting them yourself. Virtually everyone who starts out brewing uses malt extract, but going all-grain really lets you experience the magic of brewing.

mtgl wrote:What were your original and pre-secondary gravities like? How much coffee was added, and how strong was it? Will you eventually need help consuming this? The more details, the merrier
David Hammond wrote:mtgl wrote:What were your original and pre-secondary gravities like? How much coffee was added, and how strong was it? Will you eventually need help consuming this? The more details, the merrier
Roger did check for gravities, but we were not entirely sure what to do with that information so it didn't influence our decisions.
jblth wrote:David Hammond wrote:mtgl wrote:What were your original and pre-secondary gravities like? How much coffee was added, and how strong was it? Will you eventually need help consuming this? The more details, the merrier
Roger did check for gravities, but we were not entirely sure what to do with that information so it didn't influence our decisions.
The easiest thing to do with your gravity readings is to calculate the alcohol content. Use a simple calculator.
David Hammond wrote:So once I have degrees Plato, then what? I'm not seeing how, until we're much more accomplished (unlikely), this information is going to help one way or the other. I'm always interested in more knowledge, but this hunk of info seems academic. Or am I missing something?
jblth wrote:
If you aren't sure the wort is done fermenting, you can take the gravity a few days in a row. If it doesn't change it is done fermenting.
David Hammond wrote:Roger did check for gravities, but we were not entirely sure what to do with that information so it didn't influence our decisions.
RonJS wrote:jblth wrote:
If you aren't sure the wort is done fermenting, you can take the gravity a few days in a row. If it doesn't change it is done fermenting.
If the wort has reached the anticipated final gravity range I agree. If it has not, it can also mean that you have a stuck fermentation.
I've had a weizenbock maintain the same gravity for over two months at 1.028. Warmer summertime temperatures restarted the fermentation and it finally finished at 1.016.
Jamieson22 wrote:Not to be a stickler, but it stopped being wort the moment you added yeast. Once that happens it is called beer.
Jamieson22 wrote:Not to be a stickler, but it stopped being wort the moment you added yeast. Once that happens it is called beer.
JimTheBeerGuy wrote:Yeah, I guess I'm not maybe the most technically accurate but to me it's beer when you drink it. But of course, I'd have definitely sampled that stout when it was being transferred to secondary--not as delicate as Mr. Hammond on that matter


Jamieson22 wrote:The more stuff you leave behind, the less you will have settled out into your bottles.
Did you use a bottling bucket or go directly from the carboy? Looks like you may have a bit more headspace than I generally leave behind. If you use a bottle filler cane you fill to top and the space occupied by the wand leaves the perfect amount of headspace when it is removed.