Fermentation control — temperature, schedule, packaging
Why fermentation temperature is the single most important brew-day variable, and how to manage it on a homebrew budget.
Last updated 25 April 2026 · 10 min read
Temperature is everything
If you take one thing away from this whole section, take this: the temperature your yeast ferments at affects the flavour of the beer more than any other single variable on brew day, with the possible exception of pitching rate.
Hotter fermentation produces:
- More ester (fruity) compounds
- More phenolic (peppery, clove-like) compounds
- More fusel alcohol (solvent-like, headache-inducing in excess)
- Faster but rougher overall fermentation
Cooler fermentation produces:
- A cleaner, simpler flavour profile
- Slower but more controlled fermentation
- Better yeast health
- Better attenuation in most strains
Temperature schedule by strain
| Strain | Pitch at | Hold at | End-of-ferment ramp |
|---|---|---|---|
| US-05 (clean American) | 18 °C | 18–20 °C | — |
| S-04 (English) | 18 °C | 19–20 °C | optional 2 °C bump |
| WLP530 (Belgian) | 18 °C | rise to 22-24 °C | optional 1-2 °C bump |
| W-34/70 (lager) | 10 °C | 12–13 °C | mandatory 2 °C bump for diacetyl rest |
Controlling temperature on a budget
A garage in winter is ~10 °C; a flat in summer is ~24 °C. Without active control you’re at the mercy of ambient.
Cheapest controlled option: A bucket of water with the fermenter sitting in it, wrapped in a wet towel, with a fan blowing across. Evaporative cooling gives you 4-6 °C below ambient.
More reliable: A cheap old chest freezer with an external STC-1000 controller. Set to maintain whatever temperature your yeast wants. Works for both ales and lagers. About £80-150 second-hand.
Glycol chillers and conical fermenters are great if you have the budget; the budget is approximately the budget.
When to package
Take a hydrometer reading on three consecutive days. If gravity doesn’t change for 72 hours, fermentation is complete. Don’t package based on time alone — sluggish ferments can fool you.
After fermentation:
- For most ales: cold-crash 48 hours at 1-3 °C, then package
- For lagers: hold cold (1-3 °C) for 4-6 weeks before packaging
- For Belgians: condition warm (room temperature) for 2-3 weeks before bottling
Related products
- Fermentis SafAle S-04A clean, fast-fermenting English ale strain in dry form — a workhorse for bitters, milds and porters.
- Fermentis SafAle US-05The dry-form American ale workhorse. Clean, neutral, high attenuation — the right choice when you want your malt and hops to do all the talking.
- WLP530 Abbey Ale YeastA Belgian abbey strain producing the classic phenolic-and-fruit profile — peppery clove, banana ester, and a dry finish.
- Fermentis SafLager W-34/70The dry lager standard — a Weihenstephan 34/70 derivative producing clean, slightly sulphury, deeply attenuating ferments. Bohemian Pilsners and Helles start here.