Brown ale not carbing
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Brown ale not carbing
I brewed a brown ale at the beginning of December and had intended to bottle it to have for Christmas. Well, timing didn't work out and it ended up in secondary for three weeks (after a primary of 2 week). I primed with 1/2 cup of corn sugar. I popped one open last night, it is about as flat as a glass of water. Is it possible that after 5 weeks, there was so little viable yeast left that it just didn't carb?
GreyWolf27
Re: Brown ale not carbing
At what temp were the bottles stored? Can you confirm that the caps sealed tightly?
Unless you had absolutely no viable yeast (hard to imagine with only 3 weeks in secondary) you should be getting something. If the bottles were stored cold (below 65 degrees) then get 'em someplace warmer for a week or so and try another one.
Anyone else got any other ideas?
Dan
Unless you had absolutely no viable yeast (hard to imagine with only 3 weeks in secondary) you should be getting something. If the bottles were stored cold (below 65 degrees) then get 'em someplace warmer for a week or so and try another one.
Anyone else got any other ideas?
Dan
Re: Brown ale not carbing
I have bottled after 4 or5 weeks and they carb'd nicely. But temp was over 68 degrees
What was your storage temp? What yeast did you use? How much yeast did you pitch?
What was recipe?
What was your storage temp? What yeast did you use? How much yeast did you pitch?
What was recipe?
Chris aka Dr Dually
drdually@att.net
Life is tough. It is even tougher when you are stupid. John Wayne
Bottled and enjoying: Nada, zip
Kegged: English Brown, American Amber, Double Barrel Ale
Next up: Kolsch
drdually@att.net
Life is tough. It is even tougher when you are stupid. John Wayne
Bottled and enjoying: Nada, zip
Kegged: English Brown, American Amber, Double Barrel Ale
Next up: Kolsch
Re: Brown ale not carbing
+1dhempy wrote:At what temp were the bottles stored? Can you confirm that the caps sealed tightly?
Unless you had absolutely no viable yeast (hard to imagine with only 3 weeks in secondary) you should be getting something. If the bottles were stored cold (below 65 degrees) then get 'em someplace warmer for a week or so and try another one.
Anyone else got any other ideas?
Dan
Re: Brown ale not carbing
I imagine the temperature is the culprit... the corner of my living room is probably ~ 58-60. I will warm them up and see how it goes.
I'll post the recipe when I get home from work.
The yeast was a starter made ~ 6-8 hours ahead of time... WLP005
I'll post the recipe when I get home from work.
The yeast was a starter made ~ 6-8 hours ahead of time... WLP005
Last edited by Greywolf on Tue Jan 17, 2012 10:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
GreyWolf27
Re: Brown ale not carbing
Try to get them around 70-72 for a week or so and see what happens.
Good luck!
Dan
Good luck!
Dan
Re: Brown ale not carbing
Short starter time may also be a problem. I like to make starters then put on stir plate for 24-48 hoursGreywolf wrote:I imagine the temperate is the culprit... the corner of my living room is probably ~ 58-60. I will warm them up and see how it goes.
I'll post the recipe when I get home from work.
The yeast was a starter made ~ 6-8 hours ahead of time... WLP005
No stir plate? Then let it sit for minimum of 24 hours
Chris aka Dr Dually
drdually@att.net
Life is tough. It is even tougher when you are stupid. John Wayne
Bottled and enjoying: Nada, zip
Kegged: English Brown, American Amber, Double Barrel Ale
Next up: Kolsch
drdually@att.net
Life is tough. It is even tougher when you are stupid. John Wayne
Bottled and enjoying: Nada, zip
Kegged: English Brown, American Amber, Double Barrel Ale
Next up: Kolsch
Re: Brown ale not carbing
It depends on the size of the starter. If you're making a 1L or smaller starter from a vial/smackpack of yeast you're not actually going to get any growth, all you're really doing is "waking up" the yeast. In that case you want to pitch at high krausen which may be in only a few hours.
Re: Brown ale not carbing
Not sure I follow here unless you saying that it didn't ferment completely ... but with 3 weeks in secondary there should've been plenty of time for there to be plenty of yeast for tertiary fermentation (carbonation) even if the starter was small ... unless you're saying that the starter somehow inhibited the yeast. Can you enlighten me further on the cause / effect?DrDually wrote:
Short starter time may also be a problem. I like to make starters then put on stir plate for 24-48 hours
No stir plate? Then let it sit for minimum of 24 hours
Greywolf ... can you provide starting and ending gravity readings and any other info you have regarding the fermentation? And just to be sure ... you did prime with corn sugar right?
FWIW: Back when I was doing mini-mash batches, I never used a starter ... just a vial ... and never had any issues with bottled beer carbonating.
Re: Brown ale not carbing
OG was 1.046
FG was 1.014
right where they should be.
I am thinking that the temp is too cold for them where they are at. Will be moving them as soon as I complete this post, and see how they turn out in a week.
FG was 1.014
right where they should be.
I am thinking that the temp is too cold for them where they are at. Will be moving them as soon as I complete this post, and see how they turn out in a week.
GreyWolf27
Re: Brown ale not carbing
i never do starters, and never have problems with under carbonation, with fermentation times longer than stated here. i'm guessing its the cold cold living room. man that's a cold living room.
Re: Brown ale not carbing
Yes, I would say that the most likely suspect is your conditioning temp.
Dan
Dan
Re: Brown ale not carbing
I thought I had warmed it up a bit... until last night. I cracked open another bottle... no bubbles... I dropped in a thermometer... 60*...
All of my beer is now on top of my fridge... hopefully that will bring up the temp and get the yeast to carb it.
All of my beer is now on top of my fridge... hopefully that will bring up the temp and get the yeast to carb it.
GreyWolf27