(Following Don's Title theme of variations on quotes from great literature...)
I have the following dilemma: Should I rack to the secondary now, or wait a little more?
I'm brewing an Imperial Rye which has been bubbling in the airlock very nicely in the primary bucket for 7 days, and is still bubbling at a rate of once every 5-10 seconds.
Original gravity was 1.096 and the target gravity is around 1.025.
Two days ago, I measured it to 1.052 gravity, and today it measured at 1.034. In other words, about 90% of my expected attenuation has taken place, and I'm wondering if it's time to move it to the secondary for dry hopping or wait a couple of more days.
My main motivation for the secondary is a pretty hefty dry hopping, and I was hoping to let it have close 8-10 days in there before I bottle (which has to happen no later than the 3rd)
I've been looking around to see if there's a way to figure out how much more attenuation I can expect once in the secondary, but nothing firm has been found.
I'm inclined to give it a two more days, measure again, and then - unless something strange is going on - rack. The thinking is that it's better to ensure a strong attenuation than the marginal added effect of the dry hopping.
(Detailed recipe here:
http://www.aleiens.com/photo/albums/homemade-60ft-immersion )