|
CO2 bubbles alone do not measure fermentation. Are you using a bucket to ferment in? They are notorious for not sealing properly allowing CO2 to escape under the lid instead of through the airlock. Also, how much head space you have in the fermenter is a factor too, the more head space (distance from beer to top of bucket), means the CO2 won't escape out the airlock as fast. What yeast did you use, was it dry yeast or liquid and what was the gravity of your beer? Those all factor into fermentation also. An imperial stout means a strong beer, if using liquid yeast, if you only pitched 1 pack, it may have not been enough yeast, so it would take longer to really get fermenting.. If you used dry, it may be enough, but whether you sprinkled dry yeast on top of beer, or hydrated the yeast first with warm water, can also make a different on how fast the beer starts fermenting. Lastly, fermentation temp is key too, too cool, fermentation is slower, too warm, it will ferment fast but may get off-flavors. Basically, let it ride for 2 weeks at least, then open it and take a gravity reading. |
|