I made a 1G starter for a Chimay Clone at about 5:00PM last night. It’s been on the stir plate and still has bubbles coming from the bottom so I guess it’s not done fermenting. Should I:
Cool now so I can decant when the brew is done? I’m sure I’ve made a bunch of yeast. Water heating as I write.
Let it go until (when would you say you know it’s done?)
Just pitch the whole starter and give the Chimay a nice kicker?
if the starter had similar gravity , flavor profile of your clone then i would just dump it in. but remember, if this is a 5 gallon batch then this will represent 16 percent (1/6) of the final profile. if you are really worried (which i wouldn’t) about altering the flavovr profile then i would try to crash and decant. if you are already starting to boil this is likely not going to be done
assuming 5gal batch 5 x75 = 375 + 1x40 is 415 divided by 6 is final gravity of 1.069. i would say this is tolerable. you could also check your gravity during boil and boil off a half gallon more than normal to compensate, this would bring it a little closer to 1075. i would probably just follow your normal plan and throw in the whole starter.
Not necessarily…it only shows you have CO2 coming out of solution for some reason. But given the size of your starter and the short time it’s been working, it could very well still be fermenting. FWIW, I would have given that starter at least 5 days.
I’m not sure I understand the “boil it all” part…you’re not gonna reboil the starter, are you?
If it was me, I’d put off brewing until the yeast is ready. My philosophy is that if the yeast isn’t ready, you’re no more ready to brew than if you didn’t have malt or hops.
i would agree with reducing the amount of starter wort in general as discussed above, but if you have already started the mash then you only have a few options. one that we didn’t mention was going and buying few packs of dry yeast but that can be expensive.
Pitch the whole thing. I usually dont like to pitch more than a quart but you have quite a bit of yeast still in suspension that you’ll be dumping if you decant.
Next time allow at least several days for the starter to grow the appropriate amount of yeast.
You could try to cold crash it right now and get some S-33 as a backup, if it doesn’t go.
I haven’t tried that yeast, but I try to have some US-05 and S-04 on hand for those occasions when my planning didn’t allow for a good yeast crash and decant. I agree with Denny that if the yeast isn’t ready, then you are really not ready to brew, but with the dry yeasts that are out there, I never have a problem anymore with yeast planning. And FWIW, I prefer some of the dry yeasts to the liquid counterparts.
Made the executive decicion about 30 minutes ago to crash it. It may be an hour or two after I place in to primary before I can pitch it, but I think it will be OK. Next big beer I give it a couple more days…Thanks for the advice all!
Nex
I alyways let mine sit over night in the converted freezer because I can’t get my wort down to temp with my well water. It won’t hurt anything as long as its covered.