Can I bottle my homebrew later?

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by Just10c, Nov 21, 2017.

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  1. Just10c

    Just10c Initiate (0) Sep 13, 2017 Kentucky

    I have a stout that will be ready to move from secondary fermintation and can be bottled this Thursday, I will not be home at all to bottle this beer. My question is am I better to bottle it on Wednesday and give the bottles a few extra days before I open them in two weeks, or am I better to wait till Saturday when I get back home to bottle? If I do that do I still need to let the beer set in the bottles for two weeks or do i give it less time? Sorry for the errors, I wanted to get this posted as quick as possible on my ten minute break at work. Thanks in advance.
     
  2. 209Hill

    209Hill Aspirant (248) Dec 22, 2016 Virginia

    All else equal, I'd let this sit until Saturday. Two extra days in the fermenter won't do any harm.

    Carbing and conditioning in the bottle should be unaffected as well.
     
  3. GormBrewhouse

    GormBrewhouse Pooh-Bah (2,111) Jun 24, 2015 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    Second to Saturday. A extra few days will hurt nothing
     
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  4. PapaGoose03

    PapaGoose03 Grand High Pooh-Bah (6,057) May 30, 2005 Michigan
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

    It probably will still take two weeks. If this was a higher abv stout it could take longer than that. However, I always test a bottle at the 10 day mark to see what progress is being made. At 10 days if you don't get a hint of any gas escaping the bottle, you likely will have to plan on an extended carbonation period. Keep the bottles at room temp during the carbonation period.
     
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  5. Just10c

    Just10c Initiate (0) Sep 13, 2017 Kentucky

    Thank you!
     
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  6. Just10c

    Just10c Initiate (0) Sep 13, 2017 Kentucky

    Thank you!
     
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  7. Just10c

    Just10c Initiate (0) Sep 13, 2017 Kentucky

    Thank you for that helpful tip, I will start doing this as well on the 10 day mark!
     
  8. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    Slightly OT, but man I wish the kit makers would stop putting unnecessary secondaries in their recipe instructions.
     
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  9. pweis909

    pweis909 Grand Pooh-Bah (3,250) Aug 13, 2005 Wisconsin
    Pooh-Bah

    Also, specifying times as though they should be rigidly adhered to is sort of lame. They could specify more reliable qualitative and quantitative guidelines for making decisions about packaging.
     
  10. jbakajust1

    jbakajust1 Pooh-Bah (2,552) Aug 25, 2009 Oregon
    Pooh-Bah

    Your bottles are your secondary

    A few extra days in primary is a good thing

    Carbonation time remains the same regardless of time in fermenter... extended aging (months to years) may require adding fresh yeast, but still takes the same time for standard ABV beers
     
    PapaGoose03 likes this.
  11. GormBrewhouse

    GormBrewhouse Pooh-Bah (2,111) Jun 24, 2015 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    I still use secondary's especially if I am adding fruit, nibs oak or other items for stouts,fruit beer,,,, and when I dry hop because I utilize the left over yeast cake in the primary. Dry hopping in the primary will leave more hop residue on the yeast cake than I want, and I prefer to not wash the cake. Oxidation may be a problem with secondary use, but lots of folks don't mind the beer I make. I must just be lucky
     
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