Yes and yes. That is the primary subjective objective. Lolpeteru said:Is the result supposed to be drinkable? Enjoyable?
We'll definitely need some sensory evaluation reports.
They will need age. I'm thinking year(s)
Yes and yes. That is the primary subjective objective. Lolpeteru said:Is the result supposed to be drinkable? Enjoyable?
We'll definitely need some sensory evaluation reports.
I'm probably going to go ahead with mine. My SHG is getting on and I don't trust a cube with so much air space.manticle said:Open up the time frame a little and I might be in.
Autumn next year not time enough???Yob said:^^ Agree ^^
will need more time than outlined
huh? There will be plenty of bitterness..tarmael said:TL;DR entire thread - something something something hop oil half life - you have no bitterness in there after a 3+hrboilnap
Wot?tarmael said:TL;DR entire thread - something something something hop oil half life - you have no bitterness in there after a 3+hr boil nap
err..that aint right...not even close...tarmael said:TL;DR entire thread - something something something hop oil half life - you have no bitterness in there after a 3+hrboilnap
ATO looks after excise for alcohol now.Lyrebird_Cycles said:Sorry.
For those not familiar with the techniques used for measuring alcohol, the ASBC standard method was distillation using a standardised condenser, which became known as an IRS or "internal revenue" condenser because it was used to assess alcohol level for payment of excise. Proper name is a Graham condenser:
Once the alcohol is distilled over, the sample is brought back to original volume and the density is measured with a hydrometer or pycnometer. The latter is more accurate but much harder to use, most people use a hydrometer.
If you set this up for a brewery above the level at which the appropriate agency* insists on measurement rather than calculation (IIRC it's 0.5 Ml PA) you go through a procedure where you provide a measurement from your lab which is cross checked by AGAL. Once they accept that your measurements are OK you no longer have to get the separate check before you pay excise, you can just fill out the appropriate form (? Nature40 ? it's a long time since I did this) with your value.
This may sound like a lot of palaver but Abby alone pays almost a billion dollars a year in excise, the allowable variation in measurement (0.2% ABV) represents something like +/- $50million PA. They really want to know that you have the right number.
* used to be customs and excise, probably now Border Farce.
manticle said:Wot?
Yob said:huh? There will be plenty of bitterness..
Yes but not none after 3 hrs.RelaxedBrewer said:Iso alpha degrade with higher temps. So while you are converting alpha acid to iso alpha during the boil you are also losing them. If you boil for longer than ~90min you begin to lose IBUs because you are losing more iso alpha than you are gaining.
The turnover point depends on a few things but in average conditions it's about four hours before utilisation starts to decline and about 8-10 hours for it to fall to half of the value at 90 mins.RelaxedBrewer said:Iso alpha degrade with higher temps. So while you are converting alpha acid to iso alpha during the boil you are also losing them. If you boil for longer than ~90min you begin to lose IBUs because you are losing more iso alpha than you are gaining.
Yes and no. 14 below states this. However 13.4 allows for any other method that consistently gives an accurate result. This has allowed breweries doing greater than 100,000 L p.a. to continue using hydrometers provided they can convince the ATO of their ability to measure accurately and keep appropriate records.mikec said:ATO looks after excise for alcohol now.
And I thought the production level required for measurement rather than calculation was 100,000L?
OK. Thanks, as I said it's a long time since I had do deal with this.mikec said:ATO looks after excise for alcohol now.
And I thought the production level required for measurement rather than calculation was 100,000L?
You may be right mate. The syrup was thick and delicious and not much bitterness to speak of. I can't remember how much exactly but it was an English porter with the fuggles I got from Yob. I want to say 180g at 60... But will check.tarmael said:TL;DR entire thread - something something something hop oil half life - you have no bitterness in there after a 3+hr boil nap
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