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12-29-2012, 11:02 PM
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#1
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IPA: First Round Process & Advice
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Hello folks.
I've been tooling with the idea of jumping in, and my bride finally took my hint and purchased a Brewer's Best Beer Kit. I'm finally out of the gates. As with most beginner's, I'm already learning as I go from my trusty Papazian book and reading posts here. Here's what I've got going on thus far....I imagine, I need to simply wait at this point, but any pointers/confirmation will set me at ease.
I started brewing an IPA. Started with approximately 3 gallons in a kettle with 1 lb of Briess Caramei 60 grains steeped for 20 minutes pre-boil (man did that smell outstanding), 8 lbs of Briess Pilsen Light Extract were added and brought to a boil, and 3 different rounds of Centennial Hops at 2oz. per round (60-10-0 minutes). All went well minus a rookie's boil over at first hop introduction....didn't lose a ton though. That sucked though.....
Cooled the wort to 80 degrees, transferred to a carboy via racking cane/siphon introducing a good amound of oxygen, and added enough H20 for 5 gallons....seemed to be about a 50/50 split of wort to water ratio, maybe bit more water. I then took at hydrometer reading (1.042-1.044 if I read it right), and then added a liquid yeast that I activated 3 hours earlier and shook the heck out of the carboy...then I placed my Econolock....within 10 hours fermination was in serious mode, as the lock was foaming and liquid had entered the lock chamber.....then 5 hours later, POP! went my lock and bung which also broke the plastic contraption. From there, I quickly sanatized some hose and the rubber carboy bung and re-sealed. I ended up without a sealed carboy after 10 minutes of being off (enough to sanitize) which then drained for the next hour, maybe two.
From there, the fermination has slowed to a point of no additional drainage, but man is there quite a fermination show going on in the carboy. It started at about 66-67 degrees, and has jumped to 70 which seems to be within range of temp. Quite a dance going on in that carboy! In addition, I have a quality amount of sediment at the bottom of the carboy and the top has a layer of hop/wort/yeast caked to the top where the airchamber lies.
Soooooo, I seem to have resolved a few rookie misses, but I was seeking a bit of advice from here. Shall I just let this puppy sit for the next 2-3 weeks and pour a beer to plan my next batch? And from there, move it to bottling after another hydrometer read, or would there be any reason to move it to a 2nd fermentor? The beer is a beautiful orange hue that you probably couldn't see an inch into since it's so cloudy. I imagine the cloudiness begins to disapate after a bit, but I guess I'm not sure what to expect.
Any advice, thoughts, observations?
Thanks folks!
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12-29-2012, 11:48 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
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Your on the way. Leave it be in the primary fermenter for 3 weeks, then transfer to your bottling bucket and go from there. Pay no mind to the color/haziness of the beer while it is fermenting. A couple of weeks in the fermenter and it will start to clear for sure. As far as the 'blow out', I learned early to always use a blow off tube for the first week of fermentations. Women just don't seem to be able to deal with the messes I guess.... 
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12-29-2012, 11:51 PM
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#3
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Looks good. Don't forget the dry hops!
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12-29-2012, 11:56 PM
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#4
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A Bit Krusty
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Yep, all sounds well. Fun that you got to experience both a boil over previous to the hot break and a blow off all on the same batch. Whee!
I agree with Hammy, let it sit for three weeks on the primary. Boil 3/4 cup of dextrose (corn sugar) with a cup of water to make a simple syrup and pour it into the bottling bucket. Rack the beer onto the bucket gently (no splashing at this point), fill your bottles and cap them.
The hard part: Let the bottles condition for about three weeks to completely carbonate and bottle condition. Yes, you can try one in about a week but don't drink them all, they'll taste much better after about three weeks time. Young beers will often have a "green" flavor, meaning it might taste like green apples or lemon grass. This calms down a lot as the residual yeasts condition the beer.
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Paranormal Brewing
Beer so good, it's frightening.
2013: Wamphyri Belgian Dark Strong, Trinidad Scorpion IPA, Shadowman Stout, Bermuda Triangle Barleywine, Bloody Mary RyePA, Pruno.
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12-30-2012, 03:10 AM
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#5
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Excellent! Thanks...I'll post an update on the final product.
One follow up: I wasn't planning on a dry hop add. Is that necessary?
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12-30-2012, 03:17 AM
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#6
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Ditto on the blowoff tube! I also support the "primary only" school of thought. Some swear by a transfer to a secondary vessel, but I maintain that without experience, you have more chance of harming your beer than helping it if you use a secondary. It's just another chance for spills, oxidation, and infection, and if you don't have a feel for when to do it you can interrupt important functions of the yeast.
Good call on doing a simple IPA for your first batch by the way. They are tasty and all those hops tend to hide any "goofs" you may have made. Welcome to brewing!!!
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12-30-2012, 04:29 AM
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#7
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Sounds good...
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12-30-2012, 12:05 PM
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#8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ColoradoHB
Excellent! Thanks...I'll post an update on the final product.
One follow up: I wasn't planning on a dry hop add. Is that necessary?
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No, some IPAs have dry hopping additions, but not all. Since your first brew, I'd stick with the recipe. Then you can begin to experiment. 
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12-31-2012, 01:05 AM
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#9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hammy71
No, some IPAs have dry hopping additions, but not all. Since your first brew, I'd stick with the recipe. Then you can begin to experiment. 
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I think that's the best approach, be it my first go. Things are looking really good thus far. Thanks for the feedback.
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02-01-2013, 09:49 PM
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#10
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3 weeks in my primary fermenter and two weeks of bottle conditioning. Safe to say, this IPA is damn good! Thanks for the advice. The flavor is quite good, color is a bit richer orange then I expected. All in all, a success for my first go.
I do have a follow up question. The appearance of the beer is a bit cloudier in the glass then I expected and the mouth feel is a bit heavier then I expected. Is that because I likely racked a slight portion of the trub (tried hard to get as much liquid as I could) from my primary into my bottling bucket? None the less, darn good. So good, that I've just put my second batch into a primary today. Giving a English Brown Ale a shot now.
There was a suggestion in the bottling post I read to improvise a small piece of tubing in my bottling bucket to prevent any trub from moving into the bottle. Maybe that's my solution. Other thoughts?
Thanks
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