Dazza_devil
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Just thought I'd provide everyone with an update on how my first extract brew went. Given my small apartment and the lack of available space I had to do this I thought I'd type out my process for the benefit of others in the same situation.
Night before brew day
1. boiled 12 litres of water and transfered it into a sanitised container to cool overnight to room temperature. Boiling that quantity of stuff (water, wort or otherwise) on my stove takes forever, so give yourself plenty of time if you are using a crap electric stove.
Brew day
1. Sanitised fermenter and other required equipment, strainer, thermometer, spoon etc...
2. Steeped grain in boil pot in 8 litres of 66 degree celcius water. Used a grain bag for this. Steeping caramalt smells great, gives you a sense of what brewing all grain must be like. Followed Boagsy's instructions for sparging the grain in an additional 2 litres brought up to temperature in a second pot.
3. Transferred the 2 litres of sparged water into the pot with the rest of the wort and added dried malt extract to the amount indicated by IanH's spreadsheet (a brilliant spreadsheet it is). The amount for me was approx 930g. This amount dissolved easily into 10 litres. Chucked a lid on the pot and cranked up the stove to get the boil going.
4. Once the boil was going, added hops according to the schedule - Chinook for 60 mins, half of the Cascae at 10 mins, and half at flame (electric element?) out. About a third of the way into the boil I also added the remaining approx 2kgs of malt extract into another pot with 2 litres of water and brought to the boil. In the future I'll probably do this in slightly more water as it got a little hard to dissolve towards the end.
5. As the small pot was finished first, it was boiled for 15 mins and thrown into a sink full of icy water and brought down to about 27 degrees. Took about 15 mins or so. Once this had cooled sufficiently it was thrown into the fermenter through a strainer to aerate it, and to limit the gunk that got into it, and the same process was undertaken with the larger wort pot. This one took more like half an hour to cool.
6. While cooling the pots I reconstituted the yeast in a separate sanitised jug with warm water. This was left to activate for about 30 minutes while the large pot cooled.
7. Once all the wort was transferred, the fermenter was topped up with sanitised room temperature water to the fermentation volume, and the yeast pitched (temp was around 26 degrees at pitching I think). Measured original gravity of 1064, which I think it quite high for an IPA style, but probably due to the fact that my ferment volume is 20L and could've been diluted some. Something to consider next time anyway.
Seems to be bubbling away nicely now, so that's a relief.
Only issues were:
- I had was with one boilover of the smaller pot due to trying to get the temp up with the lid on. I stepped away to show a mate IanH's spreadsheet and sure enough it went all over the stove. Still cleaning it off today...
- Lid mustn't have been on tight enough to begin with as the airlock had no activity for about 8 hours despite a fairly healthy krausen forming. Tightened the lid and seems to be all good now.
The other thing I wasn't sure about was how much of the residual material to hold back from the fermenter from the boil pot. I was pretty conservative and let very little of the thicker gunkier stuff in (probably lost a little wort in the process too). I'm not sure if this was a mistake or not.
Anyway, thanks to all for the assistance beforehand with my queries. I hoped that by writing up my process someone may benefit from it down the track. I'll be sure to let everyone know how it drinks once its ready. At this stage I'm thinking two weeks in the fermenter and probably the same in the bottle before I crack one open to see how it looks. I'll be putting plenty aside to see how it improves over time however.
Cheers,
Travo
Sounds like you had a good day Travo.
I would stick your preboiled water into the fridge once you have it cool enough. That way it will bring you down to pitching temperature faster, giving less time for the nasties to take hold.
Dissolving the remaining malt can be a PITA, slowly adding to warm water seems to do the trick for me. I told you not to take your eyes off that pot if you put the lid on it. Hate to say I told you so but I can sympathise with you on the mess, been there.
I would usually pitch at a lower temperature than 26 degrees. Just me, I like to pitch at fermentation temp so I don't have to cool anything while the yeasties are taking hold. Other's opinions may vary depending on your apparatus and procedure.
You may want to strain the hop pellet material out of your boil pot if you just toss them in. I use a hop sock and don't leave anything in the bottom of my boil pot, in she goes and everything settles out n the fermenter. Perhaps other tossers can help you on that one(poorly worded).
Cheers