I have a Dark Mild ale fermenting out right now that's a hair big for style--about 1048 SG.
It has fermented down to 1018--so that's only about 60% attenuation so far. It has been fermenting @ 65-68 degrees for 4 days. Last night I raised the temp to 72-73 to get the beer to finish out. Sure enough, the airlock started bubbling again--yeast got to work, and I have a feeling that should finish the job
My question is, will raising the temp to 72-73 to achieve the last 10% of attenuation contribute a lot of fruity flavors? I hope not. I have heard that if the majority of Primary Fermentation occurs in the 66-68 range for this yeast, that is when the majority of flavor profile is lock-in.
Just hope I didn't jack up the temp to high--It's currently @ 71-72, and my plan is to drop it back down to mid-60's when the airlock stops bubbling completely--sort of a little D-rest I guess.
Does this sound like a good idea?


