Thu Jun 03, 2010 6:20 pm
Here's a related question.
I can currently only control the temperature of 1 batch at a time to any acceptable degree and recently I've had at least 3 going at a time (staggered batches a week apart, averaging 3 weeks before bottling). This wasn't a problem in the winter and spring, but I'm heading into my first summer of brewing and I'm unable to keep the other 2 buckets cooler than the mid-70s.
Generally, they've had a full week to ferment at a relatively controlled temp, and I'm brewing only ales, so I would imagine that most of the fermentation would be complete by the time they moved into the ambient temps. Are most of the fermentation processes that kick off potentially unwanted fusels and esters complete by this time?
BN Army Private First Class
Fermenting: Lucky Day Pale
Kegged: Buckwheat Bulgur & Barley Saison, Kölsch, Styrian Celia Grisette, Single Dubbel, Winter Maple Strong Brown Ale