I find that fermenting 1968 on the colder side (low 60's) seems to yield the cleanest flavor / decent attenuation.
however, I find that sometimes 1968 has a tendency to shut down and fall out, leaving beers under-attenuated.
For years I was fermenting in a basement where ambient temps were in the high 50's low 60's. Beers usually finished as they should, sometimes fermentation took longer, but that was mostly good. Then one week before summer started there was a huge heatwave. The beer was a 1.062 OG american IPA, cooled to 56-58 degrees. I pitched one 16 oz mason jar of 1968 harvested one week prior. I checked the beer a week later - the ambient temp of the basement was in the high 70's! This beer was probably the best beer I've ever made.
Is that what 1968 really needs? start cold - 58 or so, then continuously ramp up to 70's over a week??



