I brewed a very straightforward Wit beer recipe about two weeks ago. I left it in the primary for about 1.5 weeks which is quite a bit longer than I have ever in the past but I was away and had no choice. When I got back it was still bubbling away, slower of course but pretty conssitent once every 30 seconds. Now I've put it in secondary and it has slowed but I can still see bubbles rising to the top where the thing has a head. It was a WYeast Wit yeast and I did really nothing very special, should this still be going like this, will I have the driest Wit ever? How can I stop it? Now I did not use a hydrometer, I just sort of phased it out. Any help, please.
Radler
Why won't it stop bubbling?
Moderator: slothrob
WYeast Wit and still bubbling too
Hello, same problem here,
I had a pretty low OG (1.034) because of bad crushing for the wheat malt I used for that Witbier recipe.
Fermented at 73-74 for 7 days then I racked to secondary, and it looks like a new primary has started, big head and bubbles every 4-5 seconds...
Never seen that kind of activity...
At least, there will be some alcohol in the end :)
it's been 24 hours in the secondary and it didn't strat to settle back.
Will let you know in the following days.
I had a pretty low OG (1.034) because of bad crushing for the wheat malt I used for that Witbier recipe.
Fermented at 73-74 for 7 days then I racked to secondary, and it looks like a new primary has started, big head and bubbles every 4-5 seconds...
Never seen that kind of activity...
At least, there will be some alcohol in the end :)
it's been 24 hours in the secondary and it didn't strat to settle back.
Will let you know in the following days.
I would let it take its time and finish
I have brewed a number of batches of weizen using the WYeast Weihenstephan yeast. The wheat yeasts generally have a high attenuation (72-76% for WYeast Wit, source www.wyeastlab.com) and produce very aggressive fermentations, that in my experience takes longer to complete.
Every batch of wheat that I have brewed has restarted fermentation in the secondary with above average results. I would attribute this to two factors: 1) disturbing of the yeast cake during racking to secondary wakes up the dormant yeast and remixes to some degree with the beer. 2) This yeast will start attenuating the harder to convert sugars once the primary sugars are converted.
I would just let it go until finished--you should be fine. I personally have never had any problems with the batch due to secondary fermentation.
Enjoy!
Every batch of wheat that I have brewed has restarted fermentation in the secondary with above average results. I would attribute this to two factors: 1) disturbing of the yeast cake during racking to secondary wakes up the dormant yeast and remixes to some degree with the beer. 2) This yeast will start attenuating the harder to convert sugars once the primary sugars are converted.
I would just let it go until finished--you should be fine. I personally have never had any problems with the batch due to secondary fermentation.
Enjoy!
Last edited by cleone on Sun May 14, 2006 10:43 am, edited 1 time in total.