Looking to have some help figuring out the cause of finishing higher than the recipe calls. This was brewed on the 18th.
Recipe was a dunkelweizen extract kit with steeping grains. Expected OG was 1.049-1.053 to finish at FG of 1.012-1.015. Actual OG was 1.052 and FG was 1.023. Both actuals were temperature corrected.
The wort was cooled to 70 degrees, yeast was 2 packs (22g) Danstar Munich Wheat, rehydrated into 75 degree water and pitched after 15 minutes. Within 12hrs, wort cooled to 67 degree fermentation temperature and airlock activity began. Airlock activity for first 48 hours. I took SG readings Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. All were the same, so fermentation is complete. When I lifted the lid on the bucket, the krausen only reached an inch or so above the wort level. Airlock activity meant the fermentation bucket had positive pressure, pushing out air and filling the headspace with CO2. When airlock activity ceased, the yeast calmed down and began to work slower and clean things up.
After my hefe brew, it was suggested that I pitch more yeast since I'm not doing starters. I did that and now I'm thinking 2 packs was too much. The whole supply/demand principle. With twice as much yeast there is more competition for nutrients in the wort to be consumed before the yeast consume the sugar compounds, of which still twice the amount of yeast are competing to eat. One theory I've been entertaining is the yeast was stressed out due to competition thus not allowing enough healthy yeast to do the job, and dying off or becoming lethargic before optimal SG is reached. Plausible?


