logo4.png
BYO Hop Lover's Guide 468x60
  • Free Trial Issue
  • Customer Service
  • Give
  • Home
  • Story Index
    • View by Issue
    • Brew Wizard
    • Purchase Back Issues
    • Beer Styles
    • Projects and Equipment
      • Equipment Photo Gallery
    • Techniques
    • Recipes
      • Hop Chart
      • Yeast Chart
      • Grains Chart
      • Brewing Calculator
  • New to Brewing
    • Beginner's Guide
    • Your First Home Brew
  • Blogs
    • BYO Editor's Blog
    • Homebrew to Pro Brewer
    • New to Homebrew
    • Brew School
    • BYO Brew Blog
  • Resource Guide
    • Hop Chart
    • Grains and Adjuncts Chart
    • Yeast Strains Chart
    • Brewing Calculator
    • Brew Water Spreadsheet
    • Troubleshooting Chart
    • Carbonation Priming Chart
    • Brew Glossary
    • Reader Service
    • Supplier Directory
    • Classifieds
    • Where to Buy the Magazine
    • Pitching Rates for Fresh Yeast
  • Store
    • BYO Back Issues
      • 1998-2001 Back Issues
      • 2002-2005 Back Issues
      • 2006-2009 Back Issues
      • 2010 Back Issues
      • 2011 Back Issues
      • 2012 Back Issues
      • 2013 Back Issues
      • BYO Magazine Binders
    • BYO Special Issues
      • 25 Great Homebrew Projects
      • 30 Great Beer Styles
      • 250 Classic Clone Recipes
      • Beginner's Guide
      • Build Brutus 10 Plans
      • Guide to Kegging
      • The Homebrewer's Answer Book
      • Hop Lover's Guide
      • BYO Magazine Binders
    • BYO Bundles - Popular Topics
      • All-Grain Brewing Bundle
      • Belgian Beer Bundle
      • British Beer Bundle
      • Extract Brewing Bundle
      • German Beer Bundle
      • IPA Beer Bundle
      • Lager Bundle
      • Stout Bundle
      • Yeast Bundle
      • BYO Magazine Binders
    • BYO Gear
      • Brew Your Own Workshirt
      • BYO Euro Sticker
      • BYO Magazine Binders
  • Recipes
    • American Amber and Pale Ale
    • American Lager
    • American Pale Ale
    • Barleywine and Imperial Stout
    • Belgian and French Ale
    • Belgian Strong Ale
    • Blended Beers
    • Bock
    • Brown Ale
    • Cider
    • English and Scottish Strong Ale
    • English Bitter and Pale Ale
    • European Dark Lager
    • European Pale Lager
    • Food Recipes
    • Fruit Beer
    • German Amber Lager
    • India Pale Ale
    • Kolsch and Altbier
    • Light Ale
    • Mead
    • Pilsner
    • Porter
    • Scottish Ale
    • Smoked Beer
    • Soda Pop
    • Specialty and Experimental Beer
    • Spice, Herb and Vegetable Beer
    • Stout
    • Wheat Beer
  • Media
    • Videos
    • BrewCast
  • Photo Galleries
    • Label Gallery
    • Equipment Gallery
  • Projects & Equipment
  • Techniques
  • Beer Styles
 ico-fb ico-twitter

Whenever I use a yeast starter I have overly active fermentation for about four days and then almost no fermentation at all. Is this normal?

Author:  Betsy Parks Issue: September 2011

Whenever I use a yeast starter I have overly active fermentation for about four days and then almost no fermentation at all. Is this normal?
Dustin Patterson
Alabama


To answer this question I will assume that you do not have a chilly root cellar where you are fermenting lagers, and that most, if not all, of your homebrews are ales. I will also assume that you are fermenting your brews in your house at about 72 °F (22 °C).
   
So, given this information, you want to know if a four-day fermentation period for ales (assumed) is normal and the answer is unequivocally, “Yes!” I think too many descriptions of homebrew fermentations are based on using outdated methods where little packets of yeast were tucked beneath the lids of extract cans and often not used quickly enough.
   
The quality of yeast, both dried and liquid, is much better these days for a number of reasons — and I think the biggest reason is the strength of the homebrew market and the demand for such products. 
   
Yeast starters increase yeast population and allow the brewer to pitch the yeast at high kräusen, or at least very shortly thereafter. This is the period in the growth phase when cells are actively growing and is named for the yeast froth (kräusen generally translates to ruffle or curly) on top of the fermenting beer. The result of pitching yeast at this stage of growth is what seems to many as abnormally vigorous fermentation that seems to terminate too quickly.
   
Historically this type of vigor during primary fermentation was extremely important since wort spoilage occurs quickly unless brewing yeast become the dominate microbiological population. When yeast begin to ferment the sugars found in wort, pH quickly drops, alcohol and carbon dioxide concentrations begin to increase and the environment becomes hostile to many aerobic wort spoilers. Sluggish fermentations, on the other hand, leave the wort vulnerable for a longer period and the chance of spoiled beer increases. The problems faced by brewers of the past still exist today, albeit to a lesser degree because of improvements in equipment design and our modern understanding of microbiology, and the benefits of vigorous pitching yeast are equally important today.
   
Aside from the argument presented above, rapid “normal” beer fermentations generally produce cleaner beer. Many of the off-flavors associated with fermentation, such as ex-tremes with higher alcohols, esters, sulfur compounds, acetaldehyde and diacetyl, are associated with weak fermentations.
   
On a practical note, we use White Labs WLP001 American Ale for most of our ales at Springfield Brewing Company. Our primary fermentation period for ales with original gravities between 11–14 °Plato usually is complete in three days. There is nothing abnormal with seemingly-short four-day fermentations!

Tweet
Tagged under
  • Fermentation
  • Mr Wizard
back to top

MayJun13

Latest Issue

May/June 2013

  • Most Read
  • Most Recent
  • Build A Heated Mash Tun: Projects
  • Hop Stands
  • Take Your Medicine: Last Call
  • All Bark No Bite: Last Call
  • Belgian Blond: Style Profile
  • Mash Space: Mr. Wizard

subscribe-now

BYO 30 Great Styles (120x210 - started July 12, 2012)

BYO COLLECTOR'S BINDERS

brewbinders

NOW ON SALE

Protect your collection in style

hbr-2
Find Homebrew Retailers

wtb-1
Where to Buy BYO

email

Sign up for our
e-newsletter

Jet Carboy: BYO IMP12-13 (started May 15, 2012)

also wine

""

Send me a FREE TRIAL print issue of Brew Your Own and start my risk-free print subscription. If I like it, I'll pay just $28.00 for 7 more issues (8 in all) and save 30% off the annual newsstand rate. If I'm not completely satisfied with the trial issue, I'll just write "cancel" on the invoice and return it. I'll owe nothing and the trial issue is mine to keep.

Publisher's Guarantee: If you aren't completely satisfied with Brew Your Own Magazine at any time, for any reason, we'll issue a complete refund of your remaining issues.

8 issues - $28.00 Add $5.00/year for Canadian postage Add $17.00/year for foreign postage

Risk-Free. Just fill out the form and click submit.

First Name
Last Name
Address
Address 2
City
State or Province
ZIP
Country
Email

This Free Trial Print Issue offer is only valid in the US and Canada. For print subscriptions to Brew Your Own outside the US and Canada, please click here.

To order a print gift subscription to Brew Your Own, please click here.

To order a digital subscription to Brew Your Own, please click here.

  • View by Issue
  • Brew Wizard
  • Purchase Back Issues
  • Beer Styles
  • Projects and Equipment
    • Equipment Photo Gallery
  • Techniques
  • New to Brewing
    • Beginner's Guide
  • Blogs
    • Homebrew to Pro Brewer
    • New to Homebrew
    • BYO Brew Blog
  • Resource Guide
    • Hop Chart
    • Grains and Adjuncts Chart
    • Yeast Strains Chart
    • Brewing Calculator
    • Brew Water Spreadsheet
    • Troubleshooting Chart
    • Carbonation Priming Chart
    • Brew Glossary
    • Reader Service
    • Supplier Directory
    • Classifieds
    • Where to Buy the Magazine
    • Pitching Rates for Fresh Yeasts
  • Store
    • BYO Back Issues
    • BYO Special Issues
    • BYO Bundles - Popular Topics
    • BYO Gear
    • BYO Magazine Binder
  • Recipes
  • Media
    • Videos
    • Brewcast
  • Photo Galleries
  • Advertising
    • Advertising Rates
    • Publishing Schedule
    • Online Advertising
  • Subscribe
    • Print Edition
    • Digital Edition
    • Gift Subscription
  • Subscriber Services
    • Account Services
    • Renew Your Subscription
    • Pay Your Bill
    • Change of Address
    • Give the Gift of BYO
    • This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site Map