Adr_0
Gear Bod
- Joined
- 4/4/13
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So, two brews on the weekend, and worlds apart in terms of how the brew days went. A fairly standard ESB, and a tasty-sounding extra-pale black IPA that I had formulated myself. This is a story of the ESB brewed on Sunday, but I will keep it short. But, feel free to skip to the bit after 'BUT' as you can assume catastrophe in the following paragraphs.
After being held up down the coast, I was late and people were milling about ready to brew, so things were a little disorganised. Rather than mash in with the false bottom, we thought we'd try it without until Neil said "Does this need to go in?" Frick. Sure I'm not the first. So dumped the whole lot out and whacked the false bottom in.
Forgot the gypsum too.
And, didn't have the fixed thermometer in the mash tun, was still using a very very slow glass thermometer, so we were losing a lot of heat with the lid openings. The water/grain ratio was getting quite high too (wasn't tracking this) with colder water than it should have been --> ending up (looking back) at 9L/kg. Just for the BIAB crowd, I know that high water/grain ratios are mostly ok (up to 5, 6?) but pretty confident my pH was through the roof at this point - maybe 16, 17?
And a stuck drain... so out with the grain again, good clean out of the bottom and back in. Ugh. And given the likely low pH, bugger-all conversion. Ugh. Stupidly big volumes meant I didn't sparge. Ugh, there goes more efficiency.
So, did a super-long boil, and volume was down - as well as gravity. Added some demerara sugar, which will at least suit the style. Wort was darker than I had hoped and cloudy... due to high pH? Probably. Tasted very astringent too. Hmmm.
BUT...
After a couple of days at 17° with the excellent Wyeast Thames Valley (1275), the beer is fermenting well and tasting surprisingly fantastic. A few people have said it, but really we just make wort and the yeasties make beer. Good sanitation, great yeast at the right (consistent) temperature and you're probably 70% there, no matter how badly your brew day goes. Won't be a comp-winner, but should end up as a fairly good beer.
So don't sweat the small stuff... relax, don't worry, have a homebrew.
After being held up down the coast, I was late and people were milling about ready to brew, so things were a little disorganised. Rather than mash in with the false bottom, we thought we'd try it without until Neil said "Does this need to go in?" Frick. Sure I'm not the first. So dumped the whole lot out and whacked the false bottom in.
Forgot the gypsum too.
And, didn't have the fixed thermometer in the mash tun, was still using a very very slow glass thermometer, so we were losing a lot of heat with the lid openings. The water/grain ratio was getting quite high too (wasn't tracking this) with colder water than it should have been --> ending up (looking back) at 9L/kg. Just for the BIAB crowd, I know that high water/grain ratios are mostly ok (up to 5, 6?) but pretty confident my pH was through the roof at this point - maybe 16, 17?
And a stuck drain... so out with the grain again, good clean out of the bottom and back in. Ugh. And given the likely low pH, bugger-all conversion. Ugh. Stupidly big volumes meant I didn't sparge. Ugh, there goes more efficiency.
So, did a super-long boil, and volume was down - as well as gravity. Added some demerara sugar, which will at least suit the style. Wort was darker than I had hoped and cloudy... due to high pH? Probably. Tasted very astringent too. Hmmm.
BUT...
After a couple of days at 17° with the excellent Wyeast Thames Valley (1275), the beer is fermenting well and tasting surprisingly fantastic. A few people have said it, but really we just make wort and the yeasties make beer. Good sanitation, great yeast at the right (consistent) temperature and you're probably 70% there, no matter how badly your brew day goes. Won't be a comp-winner, but should end up as a fairly good beer.
So don't sweat the small stuff... relax, don't worry, have a homebrew.