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I hate to say it but was born in the early 60's so I've seen it all lol
and I've been brewing since I was 19
and I've been brewing since I was 19
Alice in Chains opened for VH in Hampton, VA in 91....I got the merchI have concert t-shirts older than you. At least Def Leppard, Van Halen from '91(?) at Merriwether.
'80s had the best hair.
I chilled a bottle over the weekend, for 48 hours. Upon popping off the cap, there was a noticeable lack of "pop" of air escaping. I poured into a well cleaned and chilled pint glass. Nearly 0 carbonation and absolutely no foamy head. It tasted sweet at this point. I let a sample warm up to 64* F and stuck my hydrometer into the test jar. It appears we are reading around 1.006, which I guess would make sense with the bottling day addition of the priming corn sugar, without a yeast conversion. I'm wondering if anyone has any other thoughts on the matter? I brewed a blonde ale on Saturday and I'm hoping not to have a repeat performance.if it is diastaticus, it will continue to drop down. since you bottled it i would be VERY VERY careful of bottle bombs. I have seen diastatics drive FG down into negative numbers. Also the only real way to tell if it had the staticus is if it drops really low or doing genetic testing in a lab. it doesnt really have much off flavor.
you didnt ferment a saison or belgian or anything in that fermenter previously did you? if it continues dropping, i would consider getting rid of that carboy if it is plastic and boil all your hoses if possible. if you have diastaticus, it will slowly ferment even down at fridge temps.
i have seen cans pop from being touched or the 6 pack/case being picked up.
just be careful. maybe wear leather gloves/eyepro when you handle the bottles until you are confident they are not gonna blow on you.
I'm going to wait another week before chilling another. Would it be unthinkable to uncap and add a bit of yeast to each of the remaining bottles if in fact there were not any viable yeast at the time of original bottling? If that is possible, how much dry yeast should be added?may not have been enough yeast in there to do the job?
Honestly I have no ideaI'm going to wait another week before chilling another. Would it be unthinkable to uncap and add a bit of yeast to each of the remaining bottles if in fact there were not any viable yeast at the time of original bottling? If that is possible, how much dry yeast should be added?
Todd
Well, I'd say no, because you thought it with your out loud keystrokes.Would it be unthinkable to uncap and add a bit of yeast to each of the remaining bottles if in fact there were not any viable yeast at the time of original bottling? If that is possible, how much dry yeast should be added?