I want to create a fruit saison, I used some interesting hops (centenial and citra) and intend to rack to secondary ontop of the fruit puree (I will also dry hop with citra).
The question I now have is when do I need to rack to secondary? The questions here Fruit Beer: When to rack to secondary?
states 2-3 weeks, but does not really say what I'm looking for to see (e.g. a certain gravity). Saison is notoriously slow for fermentation (wyeast 3427).
So if anyone could give me some indication what to look out for that would be great.
Another thing that I would need help with is: how much fruit (apricots in syrup) do I use? My batch is about 30 liters.
To answer your question: The chemical components that actual create aromas are inherently volatile (i.e. they are actually leaving the solution, which is why you can smell it). I haven't seen studies on this, but it is generally considered to be a fact due to the ease of creating empirical experiments on the subject. Further evidence of this as a "fact" is that almost all major brewers rack onto fruit after primary for this exact reason.
– MannIncognito Aug 10 '17 at 15:38