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Old 01-31-2012, 07:45 PM   #11
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Awesome! Thanks for all of the feedback, guys.

jholen, my fermentation seemed healthy. I never took direct measurements of temp, but the temperature in the room was a steady 65, so even if it was a bit warmer than that in the fermenter it should still be okay. I don't know anything about my water chemistry and have never observed my mash pH before either. I will look into that stuff more, particularly if the problem repeats. I have another AG in the fermenter right now Oh, also I aerated by shaking and the wort was also run through a strainer on the way to the fermenter.

sniperd, yeah I should have listed the FG. It was 1.012 for this batch. This was the first time that I made water volume considerations (shot for 1.25 quarts per pound for mash, used sparge water @ 170 for dunk sparge at a volume sufficient to bring total preboil volume to 4.3ish gallons). I don't remember the numbers but I took a preboil gravity reading and it was high for my volume, but I still boiled down to 3 gallons like I intended, so the OG was a little high. I'll consider shooting for more grain and less efficiency in the future maybe. You aren't the first to suggest that. Thanks for the pointer.

dooman333, thanks! That makes me feel better that it might get better with age. I know that carbonation and hops character are supposed to change for weeks, and that off flavors get cleaned up etc. I haven't heard that malt becomes more forward, but I'm glad to hear it might. These are awfully young beers I'm talking about.

misplaced_canuck, that's a good point. I've never tested my thermometer against another. It's one of those glass stick lab thermometers that aren't very handy for mashes. I'm gonna get a floating thermometer for my next one, and I'll compare their readings in some boiling water.

topher, thanks for giving me something else to try. I did do a dunk sparge into 170ish degree water for 10 minutes. I squeezed a little and then added the runnings to the main mash / boil kettle. Certainly I didn't bring the grain up to 170 though, nor stir fervently- just gently. My efficiency was actually good, but maybe some unfermentable malt character wasn't imparted somehow. Also my grain was only crushed once on my LHBS's default setting, so I'll look into finer milling in the future too.

southbay, some other's I've talked to have also foregone 2rows altogether in favor of maris otter for their base malts. I keep hearing good things, and have used it before but not in such a controlled way that I think I can distinguish it from other base malts or recognize its virtues. I'll consider upping it in the future, particularly if my low body issue repeats. Cheers.

wailingguitar, you may be on to something if my thermometer turns out to be inaccurate. I feel like the symptoms are the same as mashing at too low a temp. The difference in gravity during fermentation was higher than I expected, etc. Thanks.


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Old 01-31-2012, 07:48 PM   #12
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Hi Palefire,

not a stupid question at all, as I only bottled 5 days ago and the beer is definitely green. I normally wouldn't have posted except that 1) I ALWAYS start drinking my partial mash brews early because I like to directly observe them age and none of them has lacked body this much and 2) I've never read about malt character increasing as the beers age. I usually hear about off flavors being cleaned up and hops mellowing.

It was in the carboy for about 15 days. FG was 1.011.

I hope that you are right that it's a conditioning issue. I'll stop opening them (I've got a case left :P ) until they are of age.

Cheers.
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Old 01-31-2012, 08:10 PM   #13
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Please stop drinking so much green beer as it tempts me to do the same. Regards.
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Old 01-31-2012, 08:32 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ambrose_Balin View Post
Awesome! Thanks for all of the feedback, guys.

jholen, my fermentation seemed healthy. I never took direct measurements of temp, but the temperature in the room was a steady 65, so even if it was a bit warmer than that in the fermenter it should still be okay. I don't know anything about my water chemistry and have never observed my mash pH before either. I will look into that stuff more, particularly if the problem repeats. I have another AG in the fermenter right now Oh, also I aerated by shaking and the wort was also run through a strainer on the way to the fermenter.
fermentation temperature control is quite important. Of those three, temp control/mash pH/water, I'd say temp control is the top dog. fermenting in a
room that has a steady temperature is not bad, however you want to start the fermentation process at a lower temperature and let it slowly rise, rather than the opposite of starting or peaking high, and then cooling off.

I experienced this problem when I fermented at room temperatures - the active fermentation would kick off and heat up, however after the first 2-3 days after active fermentation was complete it'd settle back down to room temps. Something to look into - there are some cost effective solutions that don't necessarily require a temp controller and fridge/freezer. Send me a pm if you're interested and I'll try and take some pictures of my setup or find them for ya.

I know you mentioned that there was a lack of maltiness to your beer, and the hops were fairly strong/present. This could be due to an imbalance in your mineral content to your water. I don't know which imbalance it is, however I do know that certain chemicals can bring the bitterness more forward in taste, as well as for malt flavors. Something to look into. Look for your city's water report (all should have them on their website - just good "<City's name> annual water report")
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Old 01-31-2012, 08:47 PM   #15
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Just my .02 cents, but an og of 1.054 with a very hoppy (2 ounces) beer, does'nt seem balanced.
You also achieved that with 1# of crystal malt.
You don't have a malty beer because you need more malt to start with.
My IPA's usually are about 1.072
Just saying.
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Old 01-31-2012, 09:01 PM   #16
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Bull, yeah this isn't a very big one. I think the ABV is 5.6ish. That's very nearly what I was shooting for, and I know I've tasted other good hoppy beers in this range, but maybe I should up the grain bill a little next time or else boil longer. My stove top BIAB method doesn't make it super easy to hit higher OGs. Thanks for the 2 cents!
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Old 02-07-2012, 05:27 PM   #17
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In case any care how this developed: Now that the beer has had a proper amount of time to condition, it is in fact delicious. I'm surprised to learn that it tasted so flat and transparent just because it hadn't aged enough, but there it is.

So this whole thing can be added to the giant pile of "OMG my beer isn't right!!" debacles that are in fact only due to the beer being opened before it was ready :P

Thanks everyone for chiming in and getting me to consider my process better.
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Old 02-07-2012, 05:57 PM   #18
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I've been through that before I found HomeBrewTalk to get help. I did a Robust Porter that was anything but robust. I was sort of bummed about it but I had other beers to drink so every now and then I'd drink one of the porters just because they were there and one day it was good. It took something over 2 months if I remember correctly. It seemed to change in about a week's time.
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Old 02-07-2012, 11:23 PM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TopherM View Post
Some suggestions that will help your body/malt character:

1) Definitely double crush your grain, if you are not already. If you order online, I have found that AHS, Midwest, Northern Brewer, Farmhouse, MoreBeer, etc. will all double crush your grain for free if you just ask them nicely

2) Start your mash a little higher, like at 156, and figure out a way to HOLD that temp more effectively over your hour mash. I'm in FL, not KY, so it is a little easier here in the winter, but I wrap my mash in a few heavy blankets. You should maybe go to Goodwill and grab a few thick blankets or even a thick sleeping bag if you don't have some old ones lying around (they will get a bit scorched!). BeerSmith II lists 156F as the proper mash temp for a FULL-BODIED BIAB batches, 152F for MEDIUM BODIED batches, and 148F as a LIGHT BODIED BIAB batches. If your mash is ending up closer to 150, you are closer to the light bodied temps for some portion of your mash.

3) It doesn't look like you are doing a mashout, which would help alot. AFTER your mash, put the BIAB kettle back on the burner and slowly heat up to 170 over 10 minutes with the bag in there. Stir like a maniac throughout that 10 minutes. If you hit 170 a little short, like 8-9 minutes, that's cool, just turn off the heat but keep stirring through the full 10 minutes. A mashout is good for about 0.05 more gravity points on my equipment.

4) After the mashout, while you are waiting for the wort to get up to boil, SQUEEZE THE CRAP OUT OF THE BAG. Like your life depends on it. All the most concentrated wort is in there!! There can be up to 0.75 gallons of uber concentrated wort per 10 lbs of grain that sticks around in the grain bag, and you should reasonably be able to get over 1/2 of that out with a little patience and a some good squeezin!

I do all of these steps and end up with pretty consistent efficiency between 76-80% and nice full-bodied beers.
Great stuff. I order from Northern and definitely will ask them to double crush my grains for my upcoming PM.

Where would a sparge fit into this order? Would it go Mash, Mashout, Sparge (the teabag kind), then pour Sparge in with Mash?
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Old 02-08-2012, 05:57 AM   #20
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Did you use tap water? If so, I recommend tracking down a water report. Of particular interest are the sulfate and chloride levels. Sulfate accentuates hops and chloride increases maltiness. You may have a low chloride level or a high sulfate to chloride ratio, both of which may cause a perceived lack of maltiness.

The following link provides very helpful information on reading your water report:

http://www.howtobrew.com/section3/chapter15-1.html

- I read the thread again and realized that you posted an update that the beer was delicious now, so this advice may be unwarranted and too late. -


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