barakrot wrote:Hi,
This happened to me a couple of times: I brew wednesday evening. Fermentation starts very aggressively during the night, slows down during Thursday and then stops (no bubbles at all on Friday). Is that normal? Should I wait a few days before checking gravity? Should I do something else?
It can be normal. I've had beers finish that quickly (at reasonable ale temperature). Or it could be abnormal. I used one manufacturer's Oktoberfest strain 3 times and it did that to me each time. I switched to the other guy and no more problems.
The thing to do is take a gravity reading. If the gravity reading shows an apparent degree of fermentation commensurate with what is expected from the particular strain (usually in the 68 - 80% range with 75% being typical) then things are OK. For example if you brew a 12 °P beer using a yeast that is expected to deliver 75% attenuation and you find that you are at 4.8 °P [(12-4.

/12 = 60% atttenuation] then you know the yeast have ripped through most of the sugar and you can expect a gradual if somewhat less impressive reduction to an ADF in the 70's over the next few days. OTOH if things go like gangbusters for a day or 2 and the ADF is only say 30 or 40% you conclude that something is wrong and take corrective action.
This all assumes, of course, that the yeast are being operated at a reasonable temperature for the particular strain. A lager which reaches 60 - 70% ADF 2 days because you fermented it at 85°C isn't going to be a very good beer.