Tue Oct 20, 2009 6:16 am
Another reason to add your sugars to your primary after fermentation just begins to slow is if you are using a high percentage of simple sugars in your recipe (ex. BCS Belgian Golden Strong recipe) - yeast will preferentially ferment the simplest sugars up to the most complex (that it can ferment). High proportions of glucose and sucrose can actually cause the yeasts enzymatic metabolism to shift and become deficient at fermenting maltose later in the fermentation. If you let your initial fermentation run its course, and then charge with the simple sugars after a significant gravity drop, you avoid this possibility.
That and osmotic pressure are the two biggies, as Bug mentioned. Things you don't really need to worry about until >20% of your recipe is dervived from simple sugars. If its less than 20%, you're fine just adding to the kettle (there again, unless it is a very high grav. beer and your goal it to minimize osmotic pressure as well).
+1 on Randy Moshiers Radical Brewing.
ApresSkiBrewer
-
Siebel Fall '09 - BREW CREW.