I just completed my first all grain batch where I milled my own grain. I suspect I milled a little too fine for my Grandfather G30 system. The issue I had was missing my pre-boil gravity of an estimated 1.041 by 4 points at 1.037. I tried to make up for it with a longer boil so at least the opening gravity is respectable. The grain bill consisted of:
3.85kg Gladfield Ale Malt
860g Weyermann Caramunich
220g Gladfield Roast Barley
I just bought a Malt King 3 roller mill and after reading a plethora of opinions on roller settings settled on 0.9mm. It's seems to be a bit lower than many suggestions but I thought - somewhere to start. The grist looked pretty good. A nice mix of particle sizes with plenty on intact hulls. Some grains even looked as though they hadn't been cracked but when a little pressure was applied they easily broke open.
The mash went well apart from not being able to get a good coverage on top of the top plate. The wort just seemed to run though the grain bed far too quickly. Same with the sparge. There was no build up of sparge water on the top plate. My assumption is that 60 minutes plus 10 for the mash out just wasn't long enough to get an efficient extraction from the grain and a courser crush is needed.
Any suggestions on the process and/or gap settings from some of our experienced millers?
I don't really need a mill as my LHB is close and their crushes have always been spot on. I was given some malting barley by a grower friend so I thought I would have a go at malting it myself. Ahead of doing this and crushing it I planned a couple of recipes as some practice. I'm half way through malting the barley (never again!!) so keep your eyes peeled once I have finished that brew. There just might be a reasonably priced "only used three times" mill for sale.
3.85kg Gladfield Ale Malt
860g Weyermann Caramunich
220g Gladfield Roast Barley
I just bought a Malt King 3 roller mill and after reading a plethora of opinions on roller settings settled on 0.9mm. It's seems to be a bit lower than many suggestions but I thought - somewhere to start. The grist looked pretty good. A nice mix of particle sizes with plenty on intact hulls. Some grains even looked as though they hadn't been cracked but when a little pressure was applied they easily broke open.
The mash went well apart from not being able to get a good coverage on top of the top plate. The wort just seemed to run though the grain bed far too quickly. Same with the sparge. There was no build up of sparge water on the top plate. My assumption is that 60 minutes plus 10 for the mash out just wasn't long enough to get an efficient extraction from the grain and a courser crush is needed.
Any suggestions on the process and/or gap settings from some of our experienced millers?
I don't really need a mill as my LHB is close and their crushes have always been spot on. I was given some malting barley by a grower friend so I thought I would have a go at malting it myself. Ahead of doing this and crushing it I planned a couple of recipes as some practice. I'm half way through malting the barley (never again!!) so keep your eyes peeled once I have finished that brew. There just might be a reasonably priced "only used three times" mill for sale.