Uuuh yeah! Just payed for my 50l Braumeister yesterday and it will be shipped to me week 12, also got the 20l maltpipe and chiller. Can't wait to get my hands on it! Allready started designing the first brew wich is gonna be a 10,5% DIPA with about a 100 IBUs.
Maybe try something a bit easier for your first brew with the Braumeister?
There is no problem with you wanting to do that and it can be done with a Braumeister without adding extract. You will just have to plan ahead.I dont know, I like to start at the deep end. Infact, I dont think there's a single thing I know to day that I haven't learned through a mistake. I was thinking a 25-30l batch, should there be a problem with that?
Batch size 25 l
Original Gravity (OG): 1.066 (P): 16.1
Final Gravity (FG): 1.017 (P): 4.3
Alcohol (ABV): 6.48 %
Colour (SRM): 6.7 (EBC): 13.2
Bitterness (IBU): 70.9 (Average)
80.6% Pale Ale Malt
10.45% Vienna
5.97% Crystal 20
2.99% Wheat Malt
1.2 g/L Centennial (11% Alpha) @ 60 Minutes (Boil)
1.6 g/L Simcoe (14.2% Alpha) @ 20 Minutes (Boil)
1.8 g/L Columbus (16.7% Alpha) @ 7 Minutes (Boil)
0.5 g/L Irish Moss @ 15 Minutes (Boil)
So did my first brew today on the 50 litre with the following recipe:
The total amount of water was 39 litres from which i saved 7 litres for sparging. I'm not sure where I went wrong but my OG was way of, hitting 1.046 instead of of my planed 1.066. I used the preset mash schedule but reduced the boil lenght from 90 => 60 minutes. Maybe I should have used the smaller malt pipe for this size of brew? The water/grain ratio was 4,8l /kg.
You then have a perfectly round malt cake, ready to feed to chooks or children.
Did a second 20 litre batch on the BM yesterday, a Porter with a 5,1kg grain bill. 25 litre strike water and five for sparging and got an OG of 1.065 with a 60 min boil, wich means my efficiency was at 81%. My goal was 1.063 so I was real happy. I stopped the program once by pressing the two arrows simultaneously at the beginning of the maltose rest to stir the mash, but while trying to proceed I somehow f#*ked up and had to start the mash schedule all over again. I guess the 20l malt pipe would have fit a kilo or so more grain, so in my oppinion 20 litre batches of 1.085ish wort shouldn't be a problem.
Hey Batfink
Do you have the 50L or 20L model?
He has the 50L see post #129 furthur up the page.
WOW! Just tasted my first BM brew and I'm impressed. I wasn't expecting the BM to significantly improve my brewing as I thought I was doing a good job of controlling processes on my 3v system. I was mainly wanting consistency from the BM.
But my first brew (a Golden Ale) is the best pale beer I have brewed! It has some great malt flavour I had never managed to achieve in the past, and it also lacked a certain flavour (twang) I have been trying to get rid of for some time (would appear in all my pale beers)!
I don't know why, but this first brew tastes great! Significantly better than my previous attempts and its still very green. The BM is the only process I have changed. Its such an easy drinking, tasty brew. It could do with some more hop flavour / aroma but at the moment it is a very balanced beer which is what I like. Its fallen nice and bright with the aid of polyclar and cold crashing.
I'm a very happy camper!
Sorry the pic is so bad, bloody iphone.....
I haven't used my 20L maltpipe in my 50L braumeister yet but I can tell you if I put more than 10.6kg of grain in the 50L braumeister maltpipe my efficiency goes from 84% down to 65% or there about's, and there is a really slow circulation through the malt pipe.Did a second 20 litre batch on the BM yesterday, a Porter with a 5,1kg grain bill. 25 litre strike water and five for sparging and got an OG of 1.065 with a 60 min boil, wich means my efficiency was at 81%. My goal was 1.063 so I was real happy. I stopped the program once by pressing the two arrows simultaneously at the beginning of the maltose rest to stir the mash, but while trying to proceed I somehow f#*ked up and had to start the mash schedule all over again. I guess the 20l malt pipe would have fit a kilo or so more grain, so in my oppinion 20 litre batches of 1.085ish wort shouldn't be a problem.
Enter your email address to join: