LOL! My teenage daughter (don’t worry guys, she’s 16 and it’s legal in my country) is currently doing a science project and chose to brew mead. When I told her to take the original gravity of her must she instantly took out her phone and snapped a picture. I was still rooting around for my reading glasses. We just took the second reading after two weeks of fermentation (Buldog high alcohol mead yeast, that stuff is ACTIVE... and fast!) and it’s probably fermented out: we got a reading of 1.000. Snapped another picture for documentation and we’re going to take another reading in a week or so. If our calculations are correct she’s going to have a 5-litre fermenter with mead at 10,76% alcohol. We simply used the recipe on the package. Couldn’t immediately find the alcohol tolerance for this strain of yeast but a 10.76% alcohol content is plenty for her in-lab follow-up of her experiment. If she’s got any left, she wants to try to carbonate it. Mmm... methinks she’s caught the bug... Before anyone is all up in arms about this: we’re not big drinkers in the family, we don’t like the feeling of being hammered, and all grow up with the rule “drink alcohol to enjoy the taste, drink water for thirst, stand tall, walk straight, eat well before you drink, and being drunk is NOT a good look.” So far the lesson is sticking. I plan on keeping it sticking with everything I have in my power.
Every now and again, I come across a video that I utilize the pause and rewind feature to take notes. This is one of those. I found it very informative. On a completely off note, I often watch this series with a group of home brewers. We usually crack a batch, take notes ect. Every time a cat shows up in a video, we have to take a swig.
Now y’all are doing marriage counseling? Cause the Mrs and I are currently not brewing together because she couldn’t read one and didn’t tell me. Needless to say we have some mystery wines going now. Bless her heart she’s the best and tried. Y’all did a great job yet again. Many thanks!!
Thankfully i've had practice using vernier calipers for years, which does the same thing by stepping down to smaller measurements for higher accuracy. Btw, the curve in the water's surface is called the meniscus. 😉
Personally, once I started trying to read the hydrometer, the "ten-fourteen" made it much easier to understand a reading. Now my mind naturally reads it that way. Thanks for the great tips.
When reading my hydrometer for the original gravity, sometimes I will say "a dollar nine, a dollar ten", etc, or the finally gravity of .992 will be "ninety-nine cents". It's the extra zeros when read aloud that become confusing. @@CitySteadingBrews
Helped me thank you. Yes I finally got one and I also took your advice and got my wife into it by letting her come up with recipes. I'm hoping they turn out so she sticks with it.
It might also be important to point out that your SG can go up a little at first if you put in a lot of fruit from the sugars leeching out into the liquid, and to include those sugars into your calculations for ABV
Thank you i know this video is older, but i am researching before i dump my first honey and water in a bucket :) So far yall have just about everything for the first timer like me :)
The meniscus line is the term alluding you. Sorry if some one stated below. Specific Gravity is used in all sorts of stuff like finding the actual volume of a substance using 62.4#/cf..(Weight of a cubic foot of water)..even non liquid say Asphalt.Hmmm what does that have to do with a Hydrometer?
Love ya guys me and fiancé finally got into a hobby together and couldn't have done it without your guidance so thanks! No one I found explains things and the process like you 2 do
When I use my hydrometer it reminds me of fishing bobbers I used when I was a kid. I keep wanting to tie a line and a hook to it before testing a mash or wort. Don't worry, I haven't started brewing with fish yet. Hmm...sockeye salmon ale...kind of puts the "gag" in gag-gift.
Thanks for the education! Everyone in my family knows I’m the Duty Science Geek and they just assume that I know how to read one. So I’ve received gifts that had me moderately baffled and squinting because the directions were written in teeny tiny jargon that was long on charts and graphs but short on actual instructions. They assume you know how to use it before you get it, much like general lab glass, so it’s short on educational value. I have bouts of MS induced cerebral flatulence, I’m about two thirds blind on a good day and they want me to get all excited about a hydrometer that I don’t know how to use. But I know a whole herd more now than I could deduce from the mystery midget print that I was slapping my eyeballs with! Thanks!
Just took my first spgr reading today got 1.016. Unfortunately I didn't get an og, started before I found your channel, so no idea of abv. Taking over a family tradition that my girlfriends grandfather used to do for Christmas. First thing she said when I pulled out the bung/airlock was "oh yeah red currant wine, smells right" And thanks for the hydrometer lesson, helped a lot.
Do you know how much honey you used and how much water? If you did a plain mead you can make an estimate of what it was using the pounds per gallon of honey. For example, I made a batch yesterday that was 2.2 pounds per gallon and guessed it would be about 1.076 to start. My measurement was dead on 1.076.
The numbers are just percentages. 1.01 = 101%, or 1% heavier than pure water. 1.10 is 10% heavier than pure water. The reason the before and after matter, is that it shows you how much of the original sugar has been converted to alcohol. So, if you start with 1.16, and end with 1.04, then roughly 3/4 of your sugar has become alcohol. It's actually a bit more, since alcohol is lighter than water. But that's close.
thanx very helpful!!! knew the higher it floats the more sugar was in it and that 1.11 was my sweet spot and when the yeast eat the sugars it would drop to almost the bottom.
Thank you SO MUCH for this video. You made it so much easier to understand how to read those things. I started my first batch of mead (1 gallon) back on 8/6/22 (being a very novice hydrometer reader) and when I took the OG reading, I know I did it wrong. The musk line was resting somewhere between 1.124 and 1.130... I haven't taken the FG reading yet because my mead is still fermenting. But, having watched this video, I feel more confident on how to get a more accurate reading when it's time to take the FG reading. Thank you again! You guys are awesome.
Love the light easy info sharing, but you nearly lost me at dropping the cat 3:22 and shooing her/him away, luckily I did watch to the end to see her make a second attempt to be part of it all. Include the cat she/he is beautiful. Thank you for the channel.
CS Mead and More..understood ..perhaps it just seemed a little unceremonious to get her/him out of shot or mischief....just when I thought ...ooooh they have a cat ...
Wow. Than you so much for the detailed explanation. Took my 1st FG after yrs of brewing. Have a refractometer that works fine for OG but I kept getting funny FG (high ) readings. Hydrometer reading actually finished lower than calculated reading fri Brewers Friend App. Have been staring at my 20G batc waiting for it to finish and it was done. Got 74% efficiency using igloo coolers and batch sparring.
So to test if a Hydrometer is calibrated correctly you just place it in plain water and it should float at the 1.000 level? Thank you for all helpful brewing videos. :)
So it's true I was drinking a lot of winethat i learned how to make from you guys and by the way I've gotten rave reviews on your homemade wine just your basic wine everybody loves it and you guys are my heroes in that comment I was trying to reach out to people in foreign countries
Thank you for all your information and being so down to earth. I've been Bing watching all your videos taking notes and preparing to make my first Mead. Thank you for all your hard work and experience.
MAGNIFICOOOOOOOOOOOO on a serious note though I think a good video idea for you guys would be to put all of the actual stages of making alcohol on a sort of timeline. cuz I'm sure you've got different things brewing at various stages in your house... And I'm not saying you don't give this information anyways... I'm just saying I had to look all around your UA-cam to find it and I kind of pieced it all together from video to video
Excellent video, guys! Very instructive. I have a question about a situation that I have never encountered before, and I would be eternally grateful for your advice. Almost 3 days ago I began a one gallon batch of Ancient Orange Mead. I have made this before without any issues. This time, however, I am using the original Fleischmann’s bread yeast instead of wine yeast. I used 3.75 lbs of clover honey, and followed the recipe exactly. I rehydrated the yeast (2.25 tsp) in 4 oz water with a tsp of sugar. It rehydrated very nicely. After all the mixing and aeration, I filled the glass carboy with the ingredients and water to very near the top. I still had about a third of a gallon of spring water left. My OG hydrometer reading astounded me: 1.162!!! You read that right because I triple checked it. The airlock began bubbling roughly 30 minutes after pitching the yeast. This is a first for me. After two hours it was full-on percolating like a beast and still is! Now for my question: should I be worried? Will the yeast crap out and leave me with a sweet liquid and barely any alcohol or will it be rocket fuel when finished? (I did add nutrient right before pitching the yeast.) What are your thoughts? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Yours, The Insane Prepper
CS Brews Thanks for the timely reply. I was just a little nervous because I had never worked with bread yeast before and didn’t know what to expect. If it suddenly dies I plan to add nutrient and energizer and see what happens. But today I am making your recipe of a gallon of sweet red wine using grape juice and sugar and bread yeast. Thanks again!
Long-time Watcher first-time Brewer I love you guys and your show show learning a lot taking a lot of notes I sometimes laugh out loud anytime I see that you guys have cat problems well not problems just themwalking around yeah am here least I know that I'm not the only crazy cat person trying to make wine and Mead. 🐱😹😺😸
Your video on how to make hard cider popped up in my feed so figured I'd watch it been thinking about trying to make hard cider and mead for awhile now after watching a bunch of your videos I went to the local wine shop today and purchased the equipment needed to get started making hard cider and mead. I made my first 1 gal batch of Honey lemon zest hard Apple cider today. Was wondering if I read the hydrometer correct but after everything was mixed for 20min it read 1.090 so after watching this video I think I understand 🤔 and believe I read it right 🤷🏻♂️😆 just wanted to say thanks for all your hard work in making these videos, love them they help so much and offer so many ideas for future brews to try👍thanks again from the Thomas family in Northern Wisconsin 😊🍻
Hydrometers for Dummies! Thank you! That helped a lot. As a paramedic, I was taught to put a number before the decimal for medical/scientific calculations. So "zero point nine nine zero".
Actually the most informative video I've seen thank you. Just a suggestion you could have your beer/wine in 3 or 4 different states so we can watch the progression of them using the hydrometer.
So ive been watching your videos for a while and am starting my first fermentation today but am curious if a 1.092 is too much honey or would it ferment okay? Many thanks to all your videos and enjoy the content!
Thank you. Just...thank you. The .2's were killing my brain. My son is in his senior year of a Chemical Engineering degree and even he didn't know how to read it.
Could you please explain which of the below two formulae is the correct one. a. initial gravity minus final gravity, times 131.25 = ABV% or b. initial gravity minus final gravity, divided by 7.362 Which one is correct? And why these numbers are constantly used.
Both and neither. They are essentially the same thing, just going about it a different route. We use (OG-FG)X135, due to it being a bit more accurate at 10%+ ABV. Just know that no simple formula is 100% accurate for homebrewing. Lab test are the only true way to accuracy. For me, +/-2% is close enough.
The thing that bothers me about my hydrometer is the color coding. The color code becomes problematic when the gravity drops to 1.000 or below. The fine black lines are very difficult to see when my wine falls within this range because the black lines are hidden by a dark red color. Whoever thought to use a dark color code in this particular gravity range has obviously never tried to use one.
Making this now. I doubled everything to make a two gallon batch. Had trouble finding a bung that would fit. I used 3 gallon water jug. Capped it off and went to bed. I finally took cap that comes with jug and cut a bigger hole in it and was able to get the cork to fit When I took the sealed cap off it nearly blew it out of my hands. Wow! A lot of CO2 was produced in just 8 hours. I am now looking to make another recipe. Cannot wait until I get my first taste.
You really don't want to seal an active fermentation. Use an airlock or at least a piece of tubing going into a jar of water. It can and will explode if you don't!
Wow, more confusing then I thought it would be. When I get mine, I may have to watch this video about half a dozen times to understand it... I make knives as a hobby, and had to learn how to read a Dial Caliper, It was confusing at first too. So if I could get the hang of that, I'm pretty sure I can get the hang of this too. I hope. lol
Love your video's. They have been super helpful. I hear a lot of things like, "it dropped a point or two after.......". I was wondering what exactly is the point. For example, is a drop from 1.130 to 1.120 concidered a point? Or 1.130 to 1.030.
So should the number be less or more from start to finish? As in, should it float up out of the liquid? And then after brewing should it sink into the liquid? Because when I did the starting it read 40 and then it measured .990 at the end. What does that mean? Basically from what I gathered from this video is, its important to measure. There's a whole bunch of numbers some are useful, some are not. Make sure you get the bubbles off. For better accuracy don't measure the swoop in the surface tension. It's hard to understand and good luck. If you have any questions, don't be afraid to ask. So my question is: How and why do you use a hydrometer? How do you calculate the ABV from the numbers? And could you demonstrate?
Thanks guys for this video. It was very helpful. I'm subbed but never seen any food prep videos? Love you guys. I would like to party with yall sometime.
Do you shoot for 0.992 or 0.990 for your wines before racking/aging etc? And is it ever good (or even possible) to get your wine batch to an even lower level than 0.990 and would you ever want to??
03:26 LOL,,,this one goes to eleven "Why don't you just make ten louder and make ten be the top number and make that a little louder?" This one goes to eleven
This was very helpful and you've got yourself a new subscriber! but I still have couple of doubts: Most hydrometers I've seen have this colored rings with labels such as table wine, dessert wine , beer etc.And according to the instructions of my hydrometer i should not bottle anything with a lecture over 1.006. So the questions are: Are the rings suposed to give you an idea of what the final product is going to be like ? How does priming beers fits into this?
Basically cally ignore thise, lol. Yes, they are a guide, but... brews finish at different gravities. Never saw the thing about bever bottling over a certain gravity.... according to that, half my brews, more actually, shouldn’t be bottled. Without more information, I would say it’s incorrect.
I just take a picture then use my hydrometer app to figure out abv. But the only reason I use a hydrometer is to see if it hit 1.00 or less or decide if its frozen
Started our first Concord wine brew. The starting hydrometer reading was 1.080 Is this a normal starting range? For reference, the grapes we grew in our backyard, we live in New Hampshire. We forgot to take a staring temp also, but very sure it was as close to room temp as possible.
Day 5, we just took S.G. Reading: 0.996! Did we do something wrong? Thought it was only supposed to be 1.030 at this point. What do we do? And what are we looking for as a final result?
I love your channel and have started making wine, my first 4 gallons I did not have a hydrometer but I ended up getting one for the current 2 gallons I just started last night. I had a question on the readings along with the potential abv scale. So one of my batches the OG was 1.110 which puts the potential around 15% can I use the potential scale along with my ending reading once fermentation stops to figure out abv. So like to make things easy to explain my ending gravity got to 1.000 it would be around 15% basically subtracting the difference between the two numbers and using that number to line up on the scale.
We no longer have a public FB page, but we have our VIP Club. Https://www.city-steading.com/vip-club. Also… new hydrometer reading video in a few days!
My hydrometer is reading below the sp. gr 60degrees primary fermentation elderberry. What does that mean? Also, It has been 7 days since I started it. I read somewhere that you shouldn’t let fruit wine go more then 7 days. Should I let it sit more?
I didn't take a reading when I attempted your Viking Blod mead clone (I didn't have a hydrometer), but got a hydrometer via Amazon the next day. What is the safest way to interrupt my fermentation to take a reading now that we're 24 hours into the process?
My first attempt at a 7 day white wine kit, after 14 days (I live in UK!) all activity has ceased but og is 1003 and remained the same for 5 consecutive days! All homemade wine video’s I have seen tell me to wait for less than 998 is this right?
So what if you start at 1.100 and end at .990. I have always wondered this. 1.110 give you a 13% potential but there are alcohol percentage points below 1.000. .990 adds 1.25 alcohol percentage points as read on the hydrometer. You only had a 13% potential but ended at 14.25% by ending at .990. Confused? Me too!
You're not taking into account the fact that alcohol has less density than water. As ABV goes up, the difference in water to alcohol becomes greater. That's how you can have a gravity below 1.000 and it's accurate. It's the formulas used to calculate ABV that are innacurate. The worst is the 'potential ABV' on a hydrometer.
So if I didnt take a reading initially, is there no way to calculate alcohol content? I followed your blueberry mead video but I didnt have a hydrometer at the time. Got one coming in next week, but as far as I can tell I'll just be able to see when fermentation has stopped without that first reading. Help🥺
i made one out of a straw to check if it was different in my wine than in water. and it stuck out about a centimeter more in the wine than the water. so im getting somewhere I just have no idea how to actually calculate that. I am assuming real hydrometers are "tuned" specifically to a weight. I just taped the end off and plopped some nails inside until it sunk enough to get a reading. haha
I set up my Brew at 1.110 sg and when I tested it at racking it had gone down to .994. Would I be correct that at this point it has produced around 13% ABV. If so it was bread yeast i used. I am making a custard apple wine. I found out afterwards that they have just about every nutrient and essential mineral that the yeast wants. It only took 45 minutes to almost blow the lid off. Had to shake it for several hours to get the foam down and left the bottle in a bucket overnight. Hope i am reading the sg correctly
Is there a chart to see where i should be at during fermentation? Or what way i should be going and if its wrong how to correct it by adding something to get the numbers i need?
Thanks again for a great video. So let’s say I’m not confident in my OG reading and would like to know what my final alcohol content is, what device or method can I use to determine that? Is there a digital alcohol meter? Also regarding taking readings, how much is too much? How often can I remove the airlock without concerns of affecting my brew?
Well, there are vinometers but they can be pretty inaccurate. As for how often to take readings? I take one after 3-4 weeks and another a week later. If they're the same, it's done and we rack. If not, I'll give it another week or two.
Do you have a video that helps people figure out where original gravity should be by the type of yeast being used and how much sugar you want left in your brew after fermentation?
@@CitySteadingBrews I don't know if Im missing something. I've watched this video 4 times. I'm trying to figure out how much sugar to add to my must. Is there a way to calculate this?
I made my first mead following your beginner mead today. Made two different batches. Only difference is I added about 3 Oz of raisens instead of 2oz for first batch, and different honey than orange blossom. First mead with all ingredients as your beginner mead was exactly 1.10 when I took the first must reading. Second one was 1.130 . I don't know what this means, but it's way different reading. Is this ok?
If you have horrible eyesight like me, take a photo with your phone and pinch to zoom, makes it much easier to read.
Mike G I do the same thing
LOL....i just did that !!
Haha rite on. I'll be doing that from now on. Thanks
Great tip, it's great for documentation later (if you forget to write it down.)
LOL! My teenage daughter (don’t worry guys, she’s 16 and it’s legal in my country) is currently doing a science project and chose to brew mead. When I told her to take the original gravity of her must she instantly took out her phone and snapped a picture. I was still rooting around for my reading glasses.
We just took the second reading after two weeks of fermentation (Buldog high alcohol mead yeast, that stuff is ACTIVE... and fast!) and it’s probably fermented out: we got a reading of 1.000. Snapped another picture for documentation and we’re going to take another reading in a week or so. If our calculations are correct she’s going to have a 5-litre fermenter with mead at 10,76% alcohol. We simply used the recipe on the package. Couldn’t immediately find the alcohol tolerance for this strain of yeast but a 10.76% alcohol content is plenty for her in-lab follow-up of her experiment. If she’s got any left, she wants to try to carbonate it.
Mmm... methinks she’s caught the bug...
Before anyone is all up in arms about this: we’re not big drinkers in the family, we don’t like the feeling of being hammered, and all grow up with the rule “drink alcohol to enjoy the taste, drink water for thirst, stand tall, walk straight, eat well before you drink, and being drunk is NOT a good look.” So far the lesson is sticking. I plan on keeping it sticking with everything I have in my power.
Every now and again, I come across a video that I utilize the pause and rewind feature to take notes. This is one of those. I found it very informative. On a completely off note, I often watch this series with a group of home brewers. We usually crack a batch, take notes ect. Every time a cat shows up in a video, we have to take a swig.
LOL! That is awesome.
You must always be aware of the gravity of the situation......
Now y’all are doing marriage counseling? Cause the Mrs and I are currently not brewing together because she couldn’t read one and didn’t tell me. Needless to say we have some mystery wines going now. Bless her heart she’s the best and tried. Y’all did a great job yet again. Many thanks!!
Thankfully i've had practice using vernier calipers for years, which does the same thing by stepping down to smaller measurements for higher accuracy. Btw, the curve in the water's surface is called the meniscus. 😉
Personally, once I started trying to read the hydrometer, the "ten-fourteen" made it much easier to understand a reading. Now my mind naturally reads it that way. Thanks for the great tips.
Glad it helped!
When reading my hydrometer for the original gravity, sometimes I will say "a dollar nine, a dollar ten", etc, or the finally gravity of .992 will be "ninety-nine cents". It's the extra zeros when read aloud that become confusing. @@CitySteadingBrews
Super informative, I was just presented a Hydrometer as a gift and it was going way over my head. Can't believe how simple it is once its broken down.
Helped me thank you. Yes I finally got one and I also took your advice and got my wife into it by letting her come up with recipes. I'm hoping they turn out so she sticks with it.
It might also be important to point out that your SG can go up a little at first if you put in a lot of fruit from the sugars leeching out into the liquid, and to include those sugars into your calculations for ABV
Thank you i know this video is older, but i am researching before i dump my first honey and water in a bucket :) So far yall have just about everything for the first timer like me :)
THANK YOU! You just solved an issue we were having... having higher gravity after a certain time... We never degassed our samples!!!
The meniscus line is the term alluding you. Sorry if some one stated below. Specific Gravity is used in all sorts of stuff like finding the actual volume of a substance using 62.4#/cf..(Weight of a cubic foot of water)..even non liquid say Asphalt.Hmmm what does that have to do with a Hydrometer?
Love ya guys me and fiancé finally got into a hobby together and couldn't have done it without your guidance so thanks! No one I found explains things and the process like you 2 do
That’s really cool you guys can do this together!
Thank you. I didn’t understand how to read my hydrometer, but once I watched your video I finally understood! You’re the best.
When I use my hydrometer it reminds me of fishing bobbers I used when I was a kid. I keep wanting to tie a line and a hook to it before testing a mash or wort. Don't worry, I haven't started brewing with fish yet. Hmm...sockeye salmon ale...kind of puts the "gag" in gag-gift.
Thanks for the education! Everyone in my family knows I’m the Duty Science Geek and they just assume that I know how to read one. So I’ve received gifts that had me moderately baffled and squinting because the directions were written in teeny tiny jargon that was long on charts and graphs but short on actual instructions. They assume you know how to use it before you get it, much like general lab glass, so it’s short on educational value. I have bouts of MS induced cerebral flatulence, I’m about two thirds blind on a good day and they want me to get all excited about a hydrometer that I don’t know how to use. But I know a whole herd more now than I could deduce from the mystery midget print that I was slapping my eyeballs with! Thanks!
Lol.
Just took my first spgr reading today got 1.016. Unfortunately I didn't get an og, started before I found your channel, so no idea of abv. Taking over a family tradition that my girlfriends grandfather used to do for Christmas. First thing she said when I pulled out the bung/airlock was "oh yeah red currant wine, smells right" And thanks for the hydrometer lesson, helped a lot.
Do you know how much honey you used and how much water? If you did a plain mead you can make an estimate of what it was using the pounds per gallon of honey. For example, I made a batch yesterday that was 2.2 pounds per gallon and guessed it would be about 1.076 to start. My measurement was dead on 1.076.
The numbers are just percentages.
1.01 = 101%, or 1% heavier than pure water. 1.10 is 10% heavier than pure water.
The reason the before and after matter, is that it shows you how much of the original sugar has been converted to alcohol.
So, if you start with 1.16, and end with 1.04, then roughly 3/4 of your sugar has become alcohol. It's actually a bit more, since alcohol is lighter than water. But that's close.
Love your videos. I now have two brews on the fridge with notes attached bubbling away. 😊
took me forever to remember how to read it but i wouldn't want to make wine without it thanks for this you guys ROCK.
thanx very helpful!!! knew the higher it floats the more sugar was in it and that 1.11 was my sweet spot and when the yeast eat the sugars it would drop to almost the bottom.
I was glad I knew exactly what video to watch as I took my very first hydrometer reading. I’m off to the races for real now!
Glad it helped!
Thank you SO MUCH for this video. You made it so much easier to understand how to read those things. I started my first batch of mead (1 gallon) back on 8/6/22 (being a very novice hydrometer reader) and when I took the OG reading, I know I did it wrong. The musk line was resting somewhere between 1.124 and 1.130... I haven't taken the FG reading yet because my mead is still fermenting. But, having watched this video, I feel more confident on how to get a more accurate reading when it's time to take the FG reading. Thank you again! You guys are awesome.
Awesome! So glad you found this video helpful! Thank you for watching!
Best hydrometer video I've seen. Thanks.
Wow, thanks!
Love the light easy info sharing, but you nearly lost me at dropping the cat 3:22 and shooing her/him away, luckily I did watch to the end to see her make a second attempt to be part of it all. Include the cat she/he is beautiful. Thank you for the channel.
Dropped the cat? Doibtful we would harm our cats... those are our kids.
CS Mead and More..understood ..perhaps it just seemed a little unceremonious to get her/him out of shot or mischief....just when I thought ...ooooh they have a cat ...
Wow. Than you so much for the detailed explanation. Took my 1st FG after yrs of brewing. Have a refractometer that works fine for OG but I kept getting funny FG (high ) readings. Hydrometer reading actually finished lower than calculated reading fri Brewers Friend App. Have been staring at my 20G batc waiting for it to finish and it was done. Got 74% efficiency using igloo coolers and batch sparring.
Glad it helped!
So to test if a Hydrometer is calibrated correctly you just place it in plain water and it should float at the 1.000 level?
Thank you for all helpful brewing videos. :)
Yep!
So it's true I was drinking a lot of winethat i learned how to make from you guys and by the way I've gotten rave reviews on your homemade wine just your basic wine everybody loves it and you guys are my heroes in that comment I was trying to reach out to people in foreign countries
Thank you for all your information and being so down to earth. I've been Bing watching all your videos taking notes and preparing to make my first Mead. Thank you for all your hard work and experience.
You are so welcome! Thank you for watching!
thanks for this video. I clearly understand how to read these numbers now. thumbs up.
Glad it was helpful!
MAGNIFICOOOOOOOOOOOO
on a serious note though I think a good video idea for you guys would be to put all of the actual stages of making alcohol on a sort of timeline. cuz I'm sure you've got different things brewing at various stages in your house... And I'm not saying you don't give this information anyways... I'm just saying I had to look all around your UA-cam to find it and I kind of pieced it all together from video to video
Excellent video, guys! Very instructive.
I have a question about a situation that I have never encountered before, and I would be eternally grateful for your advice.
Almost 3 days ago I began a one gallon batch of Ancient Orange Mead. I have made this before without any issues. This time, however, I am using the original Fleischmann’s bread yeast instead of wine yeast. I used 3.75 lbs of clover honey, and followed the recipe exactly. I rehydrated the yeast (2.25 tsp) in 4 oz water with a tsp of sugar. It rehydrated very nicely. After all the mixing and aeration, I filled the glass carboy with the ingredients and water to very near the top. I still had about a third of a gallon of spring water left. My OG hydrometer reading astounded me: 1.162!!! You read that right because I triple checked it.
The airlock began bubbling roughly 30 minutes after pitching the yeast. This is a first for me. After two hours it was full-on percolating like a beast and still is!
Now for my question: should I be worried? Will the yeast crap out and leave me with a sweet liquid and barely any alcohol or will it be rocket fuel when finished? (I did add nutrient right before pitching the yeast.)
What are your thoughts? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Yours,
The Insane Prepper
Should be fine if it kicked in. Maybe there was more sugars in your oranges this time? Or your honey was a little more dense.
CS Brews Thanks for the timely reply. I was just a little nervous because I had never worked with bread yeast before and didn’t know what to expect. If it suddenly dies I plan to add nutrient and energizer and see what happens. But today I am making your recipe of a gallon of sweet red wine using grape juice and sugar and bread yeast. Thanks again!
Long-time Watcher first-time Brewer I love you guys and your show show learning a lot taking a lot of notes I sometimes laugh out loud anytime I see that you guys have cat problems well not problems just themwalking around yeah am here least I know that I'm not the only crazy cat person trying to make wine and Mead. 🐱😹😺😸
Design a new one. You guys could do it! Thanks for all your help.
Rite!!?? I was just talking about that with the wife,we both can't understand why we continue to use anything from over a hundred years ago. Lol
Best video I have found on the subject.
Glad it helped :)
I don't trust any of my readings before I got reading glasses. FB group is great by the way.
Your video on how to make hard cider popped up in my feed so figured I'd watch it been thinking about trying to make hard cider and mead for awhile now after watching a bunch of your videos I went to the local wine shop today and purchased the equipment needed to get started making hard cider and mead. I made my first 1 gal batch of Honey lemon zest hard Apple cider today. Was wondering if I read the hydrometer correct but after everything was mixed for 20min it read 1.090 so after watching this video I think I understand 🤔 and believe I read it right 🤷🏻♂️😆 just wanted to say thanks for all your hard work in making these videos, love them they help so much and offer so many ideas for future brews to try👍thanks again from the Thomas family in Northern Wisconsin 😊🍻
Glad we could help! Thank you for watching! :D
This was really helpful. Thanks!
Meniscus- That's the bendy thing that liquids do due to surface tension. You guys rock!
Yep! Couldn't think of the word while the camera was on!
Just mixed our first gallon about an hour ago. Now I get to hurry up and wait.
Bruh
You just have to wait faster
Lol
Hydrometers for Dummies! Thank you! That helped a lot.
As a paramedic, I was taught to put a number before the decimal for medical/scientific calculations. So "zero point nine nine zero".
Actually the most informative video I've seen thank you. Just a suggestion you could have your beer/wine in 3 or 4 different states so we can watch the progression of them using the hydrometer.
I agree, I would Definitely benefit from that
So ive been watching your videos for a while and am starting my first fermentation today but am curious if a 1.092 is too much honey or would it ferment okay? Many thanks to all your videos and enjoy the content!
I would follow a recipe from one of our videos for your first. But in general, no, that og is fine.
Thank you. Just...thank you. The .2's were killing my brain. My son is in his senior year of a Chemical Engineering degree and even he didn't know how to read it.
Thank you for this video. I was reading it so wrong. Did it the first time and was like, why/how do I have a negative alcohol content?!?
Probably the most informative video ever!! Thank you!
Thank you for this breakdown 🙏
Glad it was helpful!
Great explanation on hygrometer helped massively 👍❤️
Glad it helped!
Great video - thanks for taking the time!
Wowowowow I gotta watch this like 6 more times I still don’t get it!
COVID @ 09:04! Patient ZERO! Love you guys!
Could you please explain which of the below two formulae is the correct one.
a. initial gravity minus final gravity, times 131.25 = ABV% or
b. initial gravity minus final gravity, divided by 7.362
Which one is correct? And why these numbers are constantly used.
Both and neither. They are essentially the same thing, just going about it a different route. We use (OG-FG)X135, due to it being a bit more accurate at 10%+ ABV. Just know that no simple formula is 100% accurate for homebrewing. Lab test are the only true way to accuracy. For me, +/-2% is close enough.
Great quality vid and informative. Did you shoot with a Blackmagic ATEM?
Nope. Sony!
The thing that bothers me about my hydrometer is the color coding. The color code becomes problematic when the gravity drops to 1.000 or below. The fine black lines are very difficult to see when my wine falls within this range because the black lines are hidden by a dark red color. Whoever thought to use a dark color code in this particular gravity range has obviously never tried to use one.
Making this now. I doubled everything to make a two gallon batch. Had trouble finding a bung that would fit. I used 3 gallon water jug. Capped it off and went to bed. I finally took cap that comes with jug and cut a bigger hole in it and was able to get the cork to fit When I took the sealed cap off it nearly blew it out of my hands. Wow! A lot of CO2 was produced in just 8 hours. I am now looking to make another recipe. Cannot wait until I get my first taste.
Love that smell of fermentation.
You really don't want to seal an active fermentation. Use an airlock or at least a piece of tubing going into a jar of water. It can and will explode if you don't!
i checked a specific gravity temperature conversion chart and from 40 degrees to 120 degrees Fahrenheit and only had a 1% deviation
Holy crap!!!.....i totally get it now....
thanks man...
very cool....
Thanks for the research!
Wow, more confusing then I thought it would be. When I get mine, I may have to watch this video about half a dozen times to understand it... I make knives as a hobby, and had to learn how to read a Dial Caliper, It was confusing at first too. So if I could get the hang of that, I'm pretty sure I can get the hang of this too. I hope. lol
Sorry... we tried to make it simple. Whoever decided to break up the scale that way really needs a slap.
Love your video's. They have been super helpful. I hear a lot of things like, "it dropped a point or two after.......". I was wondering what exactly is the point. For example, is a drop from 1.130 to 1.120 concidered a point? Or 1.130 to 1.030.
1.030- 1.029
@@CitySteadingBrews thanks so much for the quick reply.
So should the number be less or more from start to finish? As in, should it float up out of the liquid? And then after brewing should it sink into the liquid? Because when I did the starting it read 40 and then it measured .990 at the end. What does that mean?
Basically from what I gathered from this video is, its important to measure. There's a whole bunch of numbers some are useful, some are not. Make sure you get the bubbles off. For better accuracy don't measure the swoop in the surface tension. It's hard to understand and good luck. If you have any questions, don't be afraid to ask.
So my question is: How and why do you use a hydrometer? How do you calculate the ABV from the numbers? And could you demonstrate?
Instead of keep reading the numbers, making it more complicated, you could have said,, just carry the one,down, but thanks it did help
Thanks for the great video it was awesome to have something to watch while my power is out
Thanks great video, I just realised I missed up my first reading then found this video. :)
Thanks guys for this video. It was very helpful. I'm subbed but never seen any food prep videos? Love you guys. I would like to party with yall sometime.
We have another channel for that. ua-cam.com/users/CSCooksandGrows
Do you shoot for 0.992 or 0.990 for your wines before racking/aging etc? And is it ever good (or even possible) to get your wine batch to an even lower level than 0.990 and would you ever want to??
I shoot for completed fermentation. The final gravity is dependent on yeast tolerance, so it's not always going to go that low.
03:26 LOL,,,this one goes to eleven
"Why don't you just make ten louder and make ten be the top number and make that a little louder?"
This one goes to eleven
This was very helpful and you've got yourself a new subscriber! but I still have couple of doubts:
Most hydrometers I've seen have this colored rings with labels such as table wine, dessert wine , beer etc.And according to the instructions of my hydrometer i should not bottle anything with a lecture over 1.006. So the questions are: Are the rings suposed to give you an idea of what the final product is going to be like ? How does priming beers fits into this?
Basically cally ignore thise, lol. Yes, they are a guide, but... brews finish at different gravities. Never saw the thing about bever bottling over a certain gravity.... according to that, half my brews, more actually, shouldn’t be bottled. Without more information, I would say it’s incorrect.
I just take a picture then use my hydrometer app to figure out abv. But the only reason I use a hydrometer is to see if it hit 1.00 or less or decide if its frozen
Started our first Concord wine brew. The starting hydrometer reading was 1.080
Is this a normal starting range?
For reference, the grapes we grew in our backyard, we live in New Hampshire. We forgot to take a staring temp also, but very sure it was as close to room temp as possible.
It's in the normal range :)
Thank you! And thank you for all the helpful videos you do! You two a great fun to watch!
Day 5, we just took S.G. Reading: 0.996! Did we do something wrong? Thought it was only supposed to be 1.030 at this point. What do we do? And what are we looking for as a final result?
Awesome thank you! I have home grown grapes and a first time brewer. Long story the first reading I got was 1.176 is this an okay place to start?
Are you sure you got 1.176 OG? That is VERY high, as in, it probably won't ferment. I'd split that in half and dilute with water.
CS Mead and More nope I have learned it was a 1.076:)
I love your channel and have started making wine, my first 4 gallons I did not have a hydrometer but I ended up getting one for the current 2 gallons I just started last night. I had a question on the readings along with the potential abv scale. So one of my batches the OG was 1.110 which puts the potential around 15% can I use the potential scale along with my ending reading once fermentation stops to figure out abv. So like to make things easy to explain my ending gravity got to 1.000 it would be around 15% basically subtracting the difference between the two numbers and using that number to line up on the scale.
Love you guys you're awesome
You Brian and derica are awesome thank you very much
You are welcome!
I'm going to have to watch this a few times before I "get it." by the way what is the name of the Facebook page so I can search for it?
We no longer have a public FB page, but we have our VIP Club. Https://www.city-steading.com/vip-club. Also… new hydrometer reading video in a few days!
Thanks guys. I just put on my first brew, apple cider. And this helped me so much!
👍 for the Spinal Tap reference @ 3:26
My hydrometer is reading below the sp. gr 60degrees primary fermentation elderberry. What does that mean? Also, It has been 7 days since I started it. I read somewhere that you shouldn’t let fruit wine go more then 7 days. Should I let it sit more?
First... below what spgr? And you can let fermentations go far more than 7 days.
I didn't take a reading when I attempted your Viking Blod mead clone (I didn't have a hydrometer), but got a hydrometer via Amazon the next day. What is the safest way to interrupt my fermentation to take a reading now that we're 24 hours into the process?
Don’t do it now, won’t help. Wait to get final reading.
Hey Brian I was wondering how much sugar is to much in a all liquid Cherry melowmel 1 gallon before adding the yeast, hydrometer wise?
Suzanne
Does it matter whether or not you test from the bucket directly or is it better to have a 'test jar' of some sort?
If your hydrometer can float, you're fine either way.
My first attempt at a 7 day white wine kit, after 14 days (I live in UK!) all activity has ceased but og is 1003 and remained the same for 5 consecutive days! All homemade wine video’s I have seen tell me to wait for less than 998 is this right?
Nope... yeast don't follow directions. When the gravity readings stay constant for a week or more, then you can rack.
Now I can say I went to science college but learned hydrometer from a wine maker! Mmmmm I'm ok😀
So what if you start at 1.100 and end at .990. I have always wondered this. 1.110 give you a 13% potential but there are alcohol percentage points below 1.000. .990 adds 1.25 alcohol percentage points as read on the hydrometer. You only had a 13% potential but ended at 14.25% by ending at .990. Confused? Me too!
You're not taking into account the fact that alcohol has less density than water. As ABV goes up, the difference in water to alcohol becomes greater. That's how you can have a gravity below 1.000 and it's accurate. It's the formulas used to calculate ABV that are innacurate. The worst is the 'potential ABV' on a hydrometer.
What if it passed 2 weeks and you strain your fruit, do we let it sit and see if it bubbles more with air lock or bottle it if it says 1.000 still?
Oh hey, you've got the "Science (its a thing)" shirt already!
So if I didnt take a reading initially, is there no way to calculate alcohol content? I followed your blueberry mead video but I didnt have a hydrometer at the time. Got one coming in next week, but as far as I can tell I'll just be able to see when fermentation has stopped without that first reading. Help🥺
i made one out of a straw to check if it was different in my wine than in water. and it stuck out about a centimeter more in the wine than the water. so im getting somewhere I just have no idea how to actually calculate that. I am assuming real hydrometers are "tuned" specifically to a weight. I just taped the end off and plopped some nails inside until it sunk enough to get a reading. haha
Yup, they are finely tuned and calibrated :)
I set up my Brew at 1.110 sg and when I tested it at racking it had gone down to .994. Would I be correct that at this point it has produced around 13% ABV. If so it was bread yeast i used. I am making a custard apple wine. I found out afterwards that they have just about every nutrient and essential mineral that the yeast wants. It only took 45 minutes to almost blow the lid off. Had to shake it for several hours to get the foam down and left the bottle in a bucket overnight. Hope i am reading the sg correctly
10:00 What I learned is that you can't keep a cat on the ground if it doesn't want to be on the ground. Sneaky kitty.
Is there a chart to see where i should be at during fermentation? Or what way i should be going and if its wrong how to correct it by adding something to get the numbers i need?
As long as the gravity goes down, it’s working. Every fermentation is anlittle different.
First 5th time, the video I've been waiting on!!!
What do you want the hydrometer reading to be to be drinkable and not drinkable
Cool! Thanks for the helpful explanation =) But how does a hydrometer work?
Is there a specific number it should read at? Or does it differ per the recipe? How do I know? lol Thanx for the info
Brans84 every recipe is different...
Thanks again for a great video. So let’s say I’m not confident in my OG reading and would like to know what my final alcohol content is, what device or method can I use to determine that? Is there a digital alcohol meter?
Also regarding taking readings, how much is too much? How often can I remove the airlock without concerns of affecting my brew?
Well, there are vinometers but they can be pretty inaccurate. As for how often to take readings? I take one after 3-4 weeks and another a week later. If they're the same, it's done and we rack. If not, I'll give it another week or two.
@@CitySteadingBrews thanks for the quick reply. So really theres no good way?! What about refractometers?
Refractometers only measure density, much like a hydrometer, so you still need a before and after reading.
If you have accurate volumes for all your ingredients we can try to estimate an OG for you.
Is there a difference between beer hydrometer and the one you are using? I can't find any other than beer hydrometer in my country.
Should be the same... ours has a scale from 0.990 to 1.160.
Do you have a video that helps people figure out where original gravity should be by the type of yeast being used and how much sugar you want left in your brew after fermentation?
ua-cam.com/video/6aLlJUMBEN0/v-deo.html
@@CitySteadingBrews I don't know if Im missing something. I've watched this video 4 times. I'm trying to figure out how much sugar to add to my must. Is there a way to calculate this?
1 pound of sugar adds 46 points in a gallon of must.
@@CitySteadingBrews tx
Do you adjust for temperature? I just made my first batch of mead and the hydrometer packaging said to add 2 points since it's 77°
I made my first mead following your beginner mead today. Made two different batches. Only difference is I added about 3 Oz of raisens instead of 2oz for first batch, and different honey than orange blossom. First mead with all ingredients as your beginner mead was exactly 1.10 when I took the first must reading. Second one was 1.130 . I don't know what this means, but it's way different reading. Is this ok?