Fremont Brewer wrote:Hey all,
I brewed up my first ever Belgian beer last weekend.  I made the Belgian Dubbel from BCS.  OG was 1.068.  I used the Wyeast High Gravity Trappist yeast.  I pitched at 64F.  Ferment took off like a rocket and blew the lid off of my bucket the next morning.  I put a blow off tube in after that.  
A week later the beer is still fermenting away.  The blow off tube is still bubbling with not much slow down from the start.
Is this normal for such a long ferment with Belgian ale yeast?  I am also a little worried that I caught an infection when the lid blew open.
Thanks in advance,
John
You're good.  Don't worry about your lid blowing off.  There's a cushion of CO2 that'll keep away the bad guys.  Lots of breweries do or have in the past used open fermenters with no problems...Sierra Nevada and Anchor to name a couple.  If you're still fermenting away in a couple of weeks, then I'd start to worry.  If it's just a bubble every minute or so, then don't worry because that's most likely just extra CO2 escaping your airlock.  But it sounds like you're doing great.  A lot of people like to ferment their Belgian ales @ 70 degrees or higher, and I'm sure it works great for them, but I've always gotten the best results with an internal fermenter temperature of 68 degrees or less.