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  1. A

    My brew's still "blubbing"

    Squeeky nailed it as to why your getting bubbles, by opening it you agitated the beer, releasing CO2. I'd probably leave it longer in the bucket though, even though fermentation is done conditioning is still occurring and it'll taste better if you let it wait another week or two :)
  2. A

    Too good lautering?

    That's your active fermentation right there, and the blowoff is normal if you filled your fermentation vessel too high, or if you pitched your yeast at too warm of a temperature (80*F+) As for fermentation time, let it stay in primary for at least 3 weeks (preferably a month) because while most...
  3. A

    Terminology question

    Best solution IMO is to buy a turkey fryer, you get both a 36L stockpot + a propane burner to match, you can get them for about $40USD
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    Terminology question

    The way I do my all-grains is to basically take between 1/3 and 1/2 of the water I'll be boiling, and use the remainder to sparge the grains, extracting most of the sugar (more water = more sugar extraction). I'm not super scientific about the precise amount of water that I use, but I will use...
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    Will astringency go away with time?

    Finish your beer! There's sober kids in India.
  6. A

    Partial Grain Mash OG Problem

    What yooper said, also depending on the temperature of the wort when you did your reading it can easily be skewed by as much at .05 compared to the 60*F standard. (hot liquids are less dense than cold liquids) Couple that with some heavier wort settling down and you probably have your answer.
  7. A

    Sort of double pitching?

    Considering that yeast cells have a doubling time of 90 minutes in their active phase, provided they have enough to eat, starting only 90 minutes behind your double pitching friend isn't terribly significant, especially when most of us here habitually leave their beer in primary for close to a...
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    Sort of double pitching?

    There are 3 situations where a normal packet of yeast won't do the job in a 5 gallon batch... 1) When you have poor sanitation, and you need your yeast culture to out-compete any bacteria/mold that may have gotten in. 2) When you have a beer with an abnormally high starting gravity like 1.07...
  9. A

    Ruined

    Well this was before you pitched your yeast right? If I were you I'd have just brought the wort back up to a boil to kill off any contamination, then depending on how much bathwater made it in boil it down to 5.5 gallons before chilling it again.
  10. A

    Will astringency go away with time?

    Well don't throw it out yet, I've had beer that tasted gross at the 2 or 3 week mark, but 6 months later tasted amazing. Time does amazing things.
  11. A

    I forgot the malt syrup... Salvageable? Help!

    As I said before the suggested fermentation date is rubbish, that's the company rushing you so that you to buy more kits. You dont need more yeast because even though your current beer is "fermented" there are still trillions of metabolically active cells in the beer cleaning out harsh aeromtic...
  12. A

    This looks bad

    Do yourself a favor and buy a large grain bag for $4.50, It'll save you a lot of headaches in managing your grains as you mash/lauter it, as well as prevent any husks from getting into your wort.
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    I forgot the malt syrup... Salvageable? Help!

    Yes, you can still add it, but you still need to prepare that can of Malt-syrup as you would your normal wort (IE: boil it for an hour or w/e the recipe prescribed) then add that to your fermenter. Just make sure that you let the new wort cool to room temp before you add it, otherwise you'll...
  14. A

    First time Brewer

    DME can sometimes be a PITA if your stirring in a large quantity of it, but other than that there's no difference except for the concentration of malt (LME is 80%malt 20% water, compared to 100% dry malt so you can do the conversions for your recipes)
  15. A

    calculating alcohol %

    As billy said, Beersmith is an amazing tool that has the intricacies. The little "potential ABV" thing you most hydrometers is useless since almost no beer will ever get 100% conversion.
  16. A

    Honey Wheat, when to add honey?

    Personally I boil everything at least for a couple min, but adding it at either 5 min left or at flameout will preserve the delicate floral flavors in your honey. Though ultimately the yeast dont care if you boil it or not :3
  17. A

    To All grain from extract.

    yea, you can get away w/ a 3.5 gallon boil on a stovetop, but if your doing a full batch (5gallons) you need to comfortably hold 6.5 gallons until it boils down to your final 5. My turkey fryer that came w/ the 12 gallon Aluminum stockpot cost me $40 at Walmart. Stainless steel is in most...
  18. A

    Iodine test for starch question

    Iodine tests are a qualitative test not quantitative. You will never get perfect starch conversion. Ever. Which means that your indicator test will still show a slight slight starch content no matter what. The Walgreens link you posted isn't directing me to a specific product, but all you really...
  19. A

    To All grain from extract.

    Large burner (turkey-fryer works fine) Large Kettle/pot (comes with the turkey-fryer burner) The above will cost you about $40 if you go the turkey-fryer route Improvised Mash Tun- I usually just keep it in my kettle, I hear coolers work too for better temp control Improvised Lauder Tun- I...
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    New to Brew

    Depends on the exact type of plastic used in the bottle, some of them arent meant to be re-used, or used beyond a certain date or in acidic/alkaline conditions, or a number of other factors. Most HBS sell the good kind of plastic 2 liter bottles that are fine for holding beer for up to a year...
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