This post was brought to you by my sister Julie, Christmas, and an Austin Homebrew Supply giftcard.
Following the yeast experimentation I decided to use my 20 gallon brew pot to do some ingredient tinkering between two 5 gallon batches. The 10 gallon batch of oatmeal stout would begin with the following grain bill:
Grist
19 lbs of 2 Row Malt
2 lbs of Flaked Oats
1.5 lbs of Victory Malt
1.5 lbs of Chocolate Malt
1 lb of Roasted Barley
1 lb of Caramel 75L
Mash
155°F for 75 Minutes
Extract
none
Hops in the Boil
3oz Kent Golding (5.4% AA) for 60 Minutes
3oz Kent Golding (5.4% AA) for 60 Minutes
Additional Ingredients
Whirlfloc
1lb Honey - Carboy 2
2oz Unsweetened Baking Chocolate - Carboy 2
12oz Blueberries - Carboy 2
Yeast Packages
2 - White Labs - English Ale (WLP002)
Yeast Starters
2 - 700mL (1 DME/4 H20) Stationary - 27 Hours
Fermentation
Primary - See Below
Dry Hopping
None
Cold Crashing
33°F for 1 Weeks
The differences in the two batches came after the 5th day after I pitched the yeast, when the fermentation slowed considerably. This slowing, and subsiquent hydrometer reading of 1.018, told me that the yeast finished fermenting the majority of the more complex sugars, and it was time to add the simple sugars contained in the blueberries and honey. Yeast ferment simple sugars easiest, so naturally they chose to ferment them first. If they are added too early it could make it difficult for the yeast to ferment the more complex sugars later.
"See Below"...that can't be a good sign. Because of this fermentation I will be creating a "Lessons Learned the Hard Way" page, and update it with issues like this. Where my fermentation was taking place was too cold, so my temperature controlled deep freezer was of no help. I had this genius idea to pitch warm at 75°F, and let it gradually fall to my target temperature of 65°F. The problem was that I insulated the carboys, and apparently did too good of a job doing so. With the exothermic yeast activity it took over a day for the beer to get into the yeast's 65-68°F comfort zone. I won't know how this affected the final product, but in the repeatable/predictable world of brewing these issues need to be ironed out. In the future I will have to find some equipment to do warming temperature control.

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