
Good point though on different yeasts looking quite different, and try to calm yourself and just observe... Trust that your excellent sanitization regime is working and just observe great beer is being made.


Joshua, your way sounds great. It addresses all that leads to clear(er) high quality beer and I will try to copy it in the future. As for what Companies do to speed up the Entire Process, their goal is different - Get that stuff out the door.... I have always found that waiting for beer is the hardest part. Once I built up an inventory, and that is only possible by brewing beer faster than it gets consumed, then waiting is not as difficult. After you have cold-crashed, transferred to the bottling bucket and warmed to room temp, what temperature do you use in calculating how much priming sugar to add? Room temp would seem to be correct? And the very thin coat of yeast left at the bottom of the bottle is/was needed to do the carbonation thing in the bottle until it is finished or the bottle gets opened. I prefer to open my bottles from the top, but I have had some open on their own....joshua wrote:Shorepoints, Degassing the Wine, Beer, or Vinegar, is the What Companies do to speed up the Entire Process.
I never de-gas, as I secondary the Beer, for 2-3 weeks, until it is "Laser pointer" Clear, then Cold Crash the Secondary for 7-10 days for any Chill Haze issues.
Then transfer the Ice Cold Beer to the Bottling Bucket, and let it warm up to Room temperature, add the priming sugar Needed, and Bottle.
I have to let it sit for 2 week to fully Carbonate, due to the "Very Little" Yeast left in the Beer.
But, there is a Very thin Coat of Dead yeasty's left in the Bottle
So, 10 days in the Primary, 14-21 days in the Secondary, 10 days Crash Cooling, and 14 days until the Bottles Open.
I am in no Hurry. FWIW JMHO.
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