Controlling FG

Folks,

I’m wondering if brewers regularly
stop their fermentation or do they let it run its course?  For example, I recently
brewed an imperial ale that had an OG of 1.085.  After 10
days in the fermenter, it was down to 1.01 which put the
ABV much higher than I targeted (9.8%).

I’ve not read anything on stopping fermentation but it seems
like something a brewer would want to do in order to hit
their numbers and control the flavor… and are there any downside
risks?

The next question is when and how?  Is it as simple as taking frequent gravity
readings and when it hits the target… cooling the beer down
and letting the yeast drop out?

Bad idea IMO. For starters you’d be taking away the yeast’s ability to ‘clean up after itself’, making yeast derived off flavors/aromas a likelihood (depending on strain).  And depending on your method of stopping fermentation, you’d be risking dangerous bottle bombs, too. Better to let any beer ferment out completely, and then make changes to your recipe (mash temp, grist, yeast strain) to finish higher in the future.

You can’t exactly control FG, or at least you wouldn’t want to artificially. I wonder about the grain bill for this beer. Is there some simple sugars in it? Is it close to 100% base malt?
I agree with Jon about the downside risk: your yeast won’t clean up after itself. Also, you wouldn’t be able to bottle because you would have to pitch more yeast but you don’t know how much fermentables are left so there would be bottle bombs.

Wort sugar balance and yeast strain selection are better ways to control attenuation.

Since yeast still clean up their metabolic byproducts (and reduce off-flavors) after fermentation is complete, it’s not such a great idea to stop them before they’re finished. Plus, I can’t think of a style where it would be beneficial to leave the beer sweeter than the proper yeast would end up.

In the wine/cider world you would typically use sulfites & sorbates and/or repeated racking to bring fermentation to an early halt. For the reasons stated above, I don’t know if that’s a good idea for beer.

Usually we write the final gravity number with an additional digit.  1.01 could be anywhere from 1.005 to 1.015, which is a good finishing range for most beers.  If you feel that you want this beer to have less alcohol you could add boiled and cooled water to it after fermentation is complete.  This way you get lower alcohol and the added benefit of more beer.

Thanks for the comments.  That’s all good input and it is clear you don’t want to
halt fermentation prematurely.    Glad I asked!

On a similar topic, if I move to secondary too soon, would that impact my attenuation?  I’ve read some
recipes where brewers move to secondary after 4 or 5 days and my beers are often
quite active at that time.

Yes, do not rack to secondary at that time. It really can only cause problems racking that early

For most beers you don’t need to move to a secondary at all and certainly not after a few days. If the beer is not a high gravity beer that is going to be bulk aging for months there is no need to rack into secondary. If you are dry hopping or adding fruit it may be a good idea to rack onto those ingredients in a secondary but only after your primary fermentation is done which you will know by checking gravity a couple days apart and the gravity doesn’t change. Racking off the yeast cake before primary fermentation may stall or end your fermentation prematurely and will likely end in off flavors like diacetyl for the same reasons mentioned above warning you off artificially ending FG.

As far as I can find on the inter webs, the reason so many recipes say to rack to seconday is to avoid autolysis, aka yeast dying and rupturing therefore spilling nasties into the beer. That generally seems to start happening somewhere around a month after they have finished fermentation. Some strains its much longer.

Not so sure about that…I routinely rack to a secondary carboy after five days or so (and if using my ‘house’ yeast, even less when making  standard or ‘session’  strength beers) and I  then let things finish out for a long as it naturally takes.  That method still gives me better results than any of the the other procedures I’ve tried.  It sometimes takes a little longer (especially for the stronger brews) but I’m in no hurry if the end product turns out better.

It’s just a matter of personal preference, of course, arrived at after trying different ways.  And there is no right or wrong way.

It’s been said a thousand times, but bears repeating: it’s best to experiment with different methods and decide which gives you the best result, rather than take anyone’s word for it.t.

What are the better results that you get from racking into a secondary after 5 days?

Hmm. Sounds like a job for the Brulosopher!

Perhaps you meant an “early rack to secondary” experiment but Brulosopher has already done one experiment regarding primary-only vs secondary:

My question, too. Seems like a recipe for a higher FG and/or yeast byproducts.

THIS^^^^^…especially the former.

I have read that Pilsner Urquel crashes at a certain gravity, and this leaves some of the characteristic Diacetyl profile this beer has. If you ever get a chance to drink the unfiltered unpasteurized PU, well, it still has yeast in suspension, and no Diacetyl. Just wanted to point out a case where a beer is crashed early.

I also know some home Brewers of a certain age, that still rack to secondary, and they make some darned good beer.

I can’t comment on the tradeoffs regarding when and if to move beer into a secondary but for some people it does seem to work well.  For example, the winner of the scottish & irish ale category from last years brew competition (Sept/Oct 2014, Zymurgy Magazine, pg. 64) moved his beer into the secondary after only 4 days in the primary!  This caught my attention and was the motivation for my question.

I typically leave my beer in the primary for 10-14 days and move to a secondary for 7-14 days.  I’m still in the learning stages and have only been brewing for 1.5 years… although I’ve brewed about 25 times now and recently shifted to all grain… and am working through the challenges to hit target OG levels.

IMO, the point with secondary isn’t so much that there’s something wrong with it as that it often (usually) just isn’t necessary.

+1.  I used a secondary for years when it was the thing to do. And I still use one on occasion for dry hopping and for fruit.  I’m just thrown by somebody deliberately racking to secondary before fermentation is done.