Are coffee grinders just for coffee?

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diebiersnaab

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I like to brew partial grain, which means that I always have a couple pounds of grain I need to crack. Grain mills are a little too steep for my modest budget, and so far my technique for cracking grain has involved an old cutting board, a bandana, and a big wooden club. I've pretty much come to the conclusion that my method is for the birds, and am looking for an alternative way to get my grain sufficiently crunched up, which brings me to my question. Has anyone used a coffee grinder before? Really I'm talking about one of those big industrial electric coffee grinders, because I've got easy access to one up at work and I'm sure nobody's going to object to me putting some barley through there. I'm just curious and I know that somewhere out there someone has had the same idea at one time or another. So, did it work?
 
I use my coffee grinder every day for rinding coffee. It works really well for that.
Even if I adjust to the coarsest setting, it still grinds much to fine for cracking malt, and I am sure that putting malt through it wouldn't help the taste of the coffee.
I would buy the grain pre-crushed if you don't have a mill. It may cost a bit more, but is will surely be easier than bludgeoning the grain.

-a.
 
I've got a how to brew book, where the guy actually cracks his grain in a blender. He tosses in a couple of handfulls and gives it a pulse or two. Then he dumps it out and does some more. This might work better than a coffee grinder in a pinch.

Do a search online for Corona grain mills. They are usually pretty darn cheap if you find the right website.
 
Lounge Lizard said:
I've got a how to brew book, where the guy actually cracks his grain in a blender. He tosses in a couple of handfulls and gives it a pulse or two. Then he dumps it out and does some more. This might work better than a coffee grinder in a pinch.

Do a search on line for Corona grain mills. They are usually pretty darn cheap if you find the right website.
The problem with the coffee grinder, blenders, and Corona mills is that they chop up the grains and hulls into small bits. A roller mill crushes the grain between 1 or 2 steel knurled rollers. when the grain is crushed in this fashion the husks stay at least partially whole and the grains themselves aren't chopped too small. This is critical for the Mash and sparging. The husks form the filter bed when the water is sparged through it. If everything gets ground up into little bits, the husks can't filter and the grains are too small resulting in stuck sparges. Also, with the husks being so small, they will get into your boil kettle and you will get astringent flavors.
I would recommend having your supplier grind your grains until you can afford a decent mill. Buy your base grain in 50 pound bags. Use the money you save toward a mill. I use the Phil Mill. It is fairly inexpensive and it works great.
http://www.williamsbrewing.com/PHILMILL_P220C71.cfm
 
RichBrewer said:
The problem with the coffee grinder, blenders, and Corona mills is that they chop up the grains and hulls into small bits. A roller mill crushes the grain between 1 or 2 steel knurled rollers. when the grain is crushed in this fashion the husks stay at least partially whole and the grains themselves aren't chopped too small. This is critical for the Mash and sparging. The husks form the filter bed when the water is sparged through it. If everything gets ground up into little bits, the husks can't filter and the grains are too small resulting in stuck sparges. Also, with the husks being so small, they will get into your boil kettle and you will get astringent flavors.
I would recommend having your supplier grind your grains until you can afford a decent mill. Buy your base grain in 50 pound bags. Use the money you save toward a mill. I use the Phil Mill. It is fairly inexpensive and it works great.
http://www.williamsbrewing.com/PHILMILL_P220C71.cfm



I'm sure a roller mill is the way to go. I was just giving a poor man's (like myself) suggestion. diebiersnaab indicated he didn't want to invest in a mill at the moment.

A quick one-second or so pulse in a blender isn't going to grind the grain up a heck of a lot, or shouldn't. You should see how fine my LHBS grinds grain. Yikes, they probably over do it. A lot of it falls right through steeping bags.

I have a Corona mill that is still in the box. It is my understanding, that you can adjust the thing way out, like if you were cracking sunflower seeds or something. I'll have to check it out.

Back to the poor man's ideas, just be glad I didn't mention putting a couple of inches of grain into an empty extract (or larger) can and banging away with three pieces of pipe taped together.... lol
 
You may need to find an alternative means of relieving stress if you give up the wooden club method. That said, if your coffee grinder has the settings I've seen on other industrial strength models, the more coarse settings might work. My suggestion is to do a test (grain is cheap, right?). Put in a handful at the coarsest setting and see if it cracks - not crushes/pulverises - the grain. If it is not enough, adjust settings until it gets to where you need. If it powders vs. cracks the grain at the coarsest setting, you're stuck with the club method or, as others note, buying things cracked from your vendor.
 
I use a Corona mill I bought from Northern Tool for $14 and get 78-85% efficiency from it without any stuck sparge issues or husks in my wort, so I think they're pretty adequate if you don't mind supplying the manpower. It's a good 20 minute workout to grind out an average batch.

I think even a burr coffee grinder is going to grind things too finely (or too much might be more accurate), but that wouldn't stop me from giving it a shot if I had access to one. May be adequate for steeping/partial-mash applications.
 
Lounge Lizard said:
I'm sure a roller mill is the way to go. I was just giving a poor man's (like myself) suggestion. diebiersnaab indicated he didn't want to invest in a mill at the moment.

A quick one-second or so pulse in a blender isn't going to grind the grain up a heck of a lot, or shouldn't. You should see how fine my LHBS grinds grain. Yikes, they probably over do it. A lot of it falls right through steeping bags.

I have a Corona mill that is still in the box. It is my understanding, that you can adjust the thing way out, like if you were cracking sunflower seeds or something. I'll have to check it out.

I wouldn't put any grain through a coffee grinder as it would chop the garin too fine. I use a porkert which is a corona type mill and get a decent crush. I have adjusted my mill by adding flat washers between the main body and the clamp on part of the body so that the discs are further apart. I can then fine adjust by using the screw in part to adjust the actual spacing between the discs.
 
boo boo said:
Lounge Lizard said:
A quick one-second or so pulse in a blender isn't going to grind the grain up a heck of a lot, or shouldn't. You should see how fine my LHBS grinds grain. Yikes, they probably over do it.

I actually experimented with this tonight while fixing dinner. (I had a pound of british chocolate malt, which is a lifetime supply for a small-time extract brewer.)

I threw a small handful in the blender--the results were not too good. After 3-4 1 second pulses, some grains were ground to dust, but about half were not cracked at all.

Maybe I'll try the food processor tomorrow night. I'm the cook, so SWMBO doesn't pay that much attention to wehat whacky thing I'm doing in there, as long as I dirty everything in one night.
 
Skip the coffee grinder, it will turn into a bigger headache then you want to deal with, plus your SO may not go for it.
You do have some alternatives to the coffee grinder provided you have these resources available.
A blender seems would work a little better then the coffee grinder.
A food processor with a plastic blade may also do the trick even better then the blender.
A Corona Mill is fairly inexpensive, and will last forever.
 
cweston said:
boo boo said:
I actually experimented with this tonight while fixing dinner. (I had a pound of british chocolate malt, which is a lifetime supply for a small-time extract brewer.)

I threw a small handful in the blender--the results were not too good. After 3-4 1 second pulses, some grains were ground to dust, but about half were not cracked at all.

Maybe I'll try the food processor tomorrow night. I'm the cook, so SWMBO doesn't pay that much attention to wehat whacky thing I'm doing in there, as long as I dirty everything in one night.



Sorry I gave ya a bum steer. I'm going to blame the blender idea on M.R. Reese who wrote Better Beer & How to Brew It. He also states that a food processor can be used. I've never tried either one. Try at your own risk! :drunk:
 
For small amounts of grain, I've heard throwing the grain in a big ziplock bag and then using a rolling pin to crush the grains works in a pinch. Probably would take a little while to get a decent amount crushed though.
 
LupusUmbrus said:
For small amounts of grain, I've heard throwing the grain in a big ziplock bag and then using a rolling pin to crush the grains works in a pinch. Probably would take a little while to get a decent amount crushed though.

My experience has been that this method is superior to a blender or food processor, both of which grind some grains to dust before they've broken other grains at all.

If you use a really large (1/2 gallon?) bag, it's even fairly quick for the amount of grains one uses in extract + specialty grains recipes. The only real problem is that thos big bags aren't cheap, and this process will wreck the bag (lots of little holes).
 
I've been thinking about using my SO's lasagna/pasta roller. The rollers for the lasanga are smooth stainless steel rollers and the gap is easily adjustable using a turn knob on the side of the thing. Both rollers turn when you crank the thing and the whole thing is stainless so clean up and care is a cinch. It seems like it would do the job very very well but there's no easy way to discharge the grains and no easy way to attach it to a bucket - that would take a bit of engineering I suppose. You could probably cut a hole in the base of it and then bolt the edges to a board (with a hole in it also) and then set that on a bucket... you'd also need to attach some sort of hopper. It would probably take a bit of work to do enough grains for a whole batch but if you're doing the extract w/grains routine then I bet it would be the best solution hands down. She said it cost $20 at one of those specialty cooking stores. I'll probably never get around to using it since she won't like me cutting it up/drilling holes in it and my LHBS mills my grains for free. I'm not planning on purchasing any grains in bulk any time soon anyway, I've got no where to put them.

As for the coffee grinder solution, I recommend against it.. you want your grains cracked, not ground.

If y'all are really interested in the pasta roller then I could post some pictures of it... let me know.
 
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