Ah yeah, nearly forgot, I'll start getting that organised now.. Cheers!Maybe put together a starter; get it going; and pitch!
Ah yeah, nearly forgot, I'll start getting that organised now.. Cheers!Maybe put together a starter; get it going; and pitch!
hi,Dan, is your brewery a single pot recirc type ? Has anyone tried similar with a 3V RIMS ? What's the maximum timeframe for the initial soak ?
I did a starter with the same yeast, it was much older and I had to do a couple steps but it all came back to life and wow, it made a delightfully fruity XPA!Today i kept 1.2lts for a yeast starter with a whitelabs Pacific Ale yeast that was out of date AUG-16, on the stir plate right now.
I did a starter with the same yeast, it was much older and I had to do a couple steps but it all came back to life and wow, it made a delightfully fruity XPA!
I brewed a Black IIPA on the weekend, sadly I didn't hit my numbers;
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Black IIPA (BIAB)
OG 1083
FG 1018
ABV 8.9%
IBU 103
EBC 114
VOL 24L
Grain Bill
65.5% American Ale
9.7% Aurora
9.1% White Sugar
4.8% Dark Crystal
4.8% Midnight Wheat
3.6% Carafa 3
2.4% Acidulated
Hop Schedule
40g Citra @ 60 mins
25g Chinook @ 25 mins
25g Cascade @ 25 mins
15g Centennial @ 10 mins
(Yeast Nutrient @ 10 mins - forgot!)
(Whirlfloc @ 10 mins - forgot!)
30g Chinook @ 5 mins
100g Citra @ Aroma Steep
25g Chinook @ Aroma Steep
25g Cascade @ Aroma Steep
(Haven't worked out the dry hop yet)
Mashed @ 64 degrees for 60 mins
Mash out @ 75 degrees for 10 mins (I have questions about this below)
Boil for 75 Mins
Cooled to 80 degrees and did a aroma steep for further 30 mins
Dumped to cube
WL051 California Ale V (harvested)
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The recipe calls for about 750g of sugar which I was going to syrup and add to the fermenter at high kraussen, so without that addition I was meant to hit 1.071 but only managed 1.060. I think there were two contributors to this; my LHBS don't do a very good mill of the grain (my own mill coming this week) and secondly, I think I sparged/rinsed with too much water (about 3L too much), subsequently I didn't boil down far enough either. I had forgotten that I was targeting 24L instead of my usual 26L and as I was brewing with a crowd (and a few beers under my belt) some things slipped my mind. Note to self; don't brew bigger beers with a crowd.
Anyway, I don't think it will matter too much, in terms of ABV it might just make it a IPA on the higher end of the scale. I'm wondering, with a late sugar addition how do I recalculate the ABV?
Also, as I BIAB, I typically just raise the bag, set the urn to boil, drain/squeeze followed by a light rinse of 75 degree water and final squeeze. Everytime I've done this I haven't had a problem but a mate of mine was getting in my ear about mashing out, dumping the bag back in for 10 minutes at 75 degrees. I don't know, this sorta stuffed my usual process and I think this is where I started making some mistakes - curious though, what do other BIAB'ers do in regards to mash out?
Finished brewing at about 2 am, spent the whole next day cleaning with a slight hangover. Urgh, still suffering.
Make sure you use a false bottom or at least lift the bag off the bottom of the urn before turning the heat on, otherwise you may burn a hole in the bag.Thanks @themonkeysback I'm using a 40l Crown urn so I normally just lift the bag at the end of the mash in the 64-67 degree range - sounds like I should be leaving it in there until it hits 78 degrees for 10 mins before I lift it..
oh yeah and dextrose, don't use table sugar.
Another two brews down on the weekend.
NZ IPA at the top with Vienna and Wheat malts, hopped with Pacific Jade, Motueka and Nelson Sauvin, fermenting with WLP644 Sacc Trois.
Below is a 'Super' Kolsch, with Pilsner and Munich malts, bittered with Perle and a late addition of Saaz, fermenting with K-97 German Ale Yeast
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