Hi all,
First time poster, I've been lurking around for a little while myself now and will be stepping back into the world of brewing this weekend after returning from overseas not all that long ago.
Having done kit brewing on and off for a few years now I thought the time was right to try my hand at an all extract brew, hopefully on my way to all grain down the track. As such I thought I'd start of with something relatively simple (i.e. no speciality grains) in the form of a standard type pale ale. The ingredients are as follows (for a 19 ltr brew):
3kg Dry Pale Malt Extract
26-27g Chinook hops
15g Cascade hops 10 mins
13g Cascade hops 0 mins
US-05 yeast
60 minute boil. I'm hoping to do a 10 ltr boil, as I'll be doing all of this in a very small apartment with an electric stove to top things off.
I'm hoping the good folk on here can help with a few questions I have.
- Can I boil 3kg of dry extract in a 10ltr boil, or is that just too ambitious? I'd prefer the boil not to have the consistency of porridge if possible . What would others suggest for a boil size? I have a 20ltr pot but both stove power and the weight the stove will support (its got a glass base) are the limiting factors here.
- I'm a little unclear on how much of the Chinook hops i should be adding and when. I was under the impression it should go in for the full 60mins of boiling time, and based on the numbers in the extract spreadsheet tool I figured about 27g would give a suitable IBU. Does this sound correct to others. Also, as far as the hops go, do people suggest putting them into some kind of food grade pouch, or straight into the boil?
I'm in the process of re-reading "how to brew" so i've got a good resource there also, so am comfortable with what has to happen on the day, but really want to sort out all these procedural questions beforehand if possible.
Unrelated to the above questions, I've also got an Oktoberfest style party coming up and was hoping to have a brew done for that too. Does anyone have any suggestions for ale type german beers that could go from extract to glass in a little under a month? I know that's pushing it time wise. Ideally if i had more time I'd try a lager, but I don't have the lead time. Ultimately if I don't have enough time to brew right I'd prefer not to do it at all, but it would be really great to have something ready to drink on the day.
Thanks,
Trav
First time poster, I've been lurking around for a little while myself now and will be stepping back into the world of brewing this weekend after returning from overseas not all that long ago.
Having done kit brewing on and off for a few years now I thought the time was right to try my hand at an all extract brew, hopefully on my way to all grain down the track. As such I thought I'd start of with something relatively simple (i.e. no speciality grains) in the form of a standard type pale ale. The ingredients are as follows (for a 19 ltr brew):
3kg Dry Pale Malt Extract
26-27g Chinook hops
15g Cascade hops 10 mins
13g Cascade hops 0 mins
US-05 yeast
60 minute boil. I'm hoping to do a 10 ltr boil, as I'll be doing all of this in a very small apartment with an electric stove to top things off.
I'm hoping the good folk on here can help with a few questions I have.
- Can I boil 3kg of dry extract in a 10ltr boil, or is that just too ambitious? I'd prefer the boil not to have the consistency of porridge if possible . What would others suggest for a boil size? I have a 20ltr pot but both stove power and the weight the stove will support (its got a glass base) are the limiting factors here.
- I'm a little unclear on how much of the Chinook hops i should be adding and when. I was under the impression it should go in for the full 60mins of boiling time, and based on the numbers in the extract spreadsheet tool I figured about 27g would give a suitable IBU. Does this sound correct to others. Also, as far as the hops go, do people suggest putting them into some kind of food grade pouch, or straight into the boil?
I'm in the process of re-reading "how to brew" so i've got a good resource there also, so am comfortable with what has to happen on the day, but really want to sort out all these procedural questions beforehand if possible.
Unrelated to the above questions, I've also got an Oktoberfest style party coming up and was hoping to have a brew done for that too. Does anyone have any suggestions for ale type german beers that could go from extract to glass in a little under a month? I know that's pushing it time wise. Ideally if i had more time I'd try a lager, but I don't have the lead time. Ultimately if I don't have enough time to brew right I'd prefer not to do it at all, but it would be really great to have something ready to drink on the day.
Thanks,
Trav