Long fermentation for a Belgium strong Ale- Questions
Posted: Wed Jan 21, 2009 11:49 am
First beer is a first runnings of 5 gallons and the second runnings strong beer is 3 gallons. Both beers were made with 15 lbs of grain for the mash. The first runnings started at 1.084 and not sure about the second one. I did add a 1lb of sugar in the last 15 minutes of the boil and another 1.5 lbs in the primary as the fermentation was slowing for the first big beer. I didn't add extra sugar to the second running partygle beer.
First question. With the beer racked into secondary and little to no bubbles for a week, should I be concerned if the fermentation took off again now 3 weeks into secondary? It's not just a little action, but I had to put a blow-off line on the secondary because it's going nuts again and clogged two airlocks with beer. The recipe is the one I posted for the Happy Holiday Ale. The yeast for the first is a reused Belgium Abbey ale from White Labs. The second runnings is going good too with lots of bubbles and fermented using a dry yeast; this one has about an ounce of oak chips. It's been on oak for almost a month. If I bottle either or both beers after I return from the desert in 4.5 months, is this too long in the secondary if I'm getting a nice layer of yeast sediment on the bottom of both and is the risk for too much oak a problem after 4 to 6 months for the 3 gallon batch? I'm running out of time to bottle before I leave and I'm thinking the 5.5 months on oak shouldn't be a problem and the yeast shouldn't eat it self if the beer is in secondary. I've only aged beer in the secondary for 90+ days back in 2002 and the beer was fine. These damn deployments keep getting in the way of brewing
. It's my first time using oak chips.
First question. With the beer racked into secondary and little to no bubbles for a week, should I be concerned if the fermentation took off again now 3 weeks into secondary? It's not just a little action, but I had to put a blow-off line on the secondary because it's going nuts again and clogged two airlocks with beer. The recipe is the one I posted for the Happy Holiday Ale. The yeast for the first is a reused Belgium Abbey ale from White Labs. The second runnings is going good too with lots of bubbles and fermented using a dry yeast; this one has about an ounce of oak chips. It's been on oak for almost a month. If I bottle either or both beers after I return from the desert in 4.5 months, is this too long in the secondary if I'm getting a nice layer of yeast sediment on the bottom of both and is the risk for too much oak a problem after 4 to 6 months for the 3 gallon batch? I'm running out of time to bottle before I leave and I'm thinking the 5.5 months on oak shouldn't be a problem and the yeast shouldn't eat it self if the beer is in secondary. I've only aged beer in the secondary for 90+ days back in 2002 and the beer was fine. These damn deployments keep getting in the way of brewing
