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weighing grain

Discussion in 'All Grain & Partial Mash Brewing' started by wickman6, Jan 25, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    wickman6

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2012
    Most of my recipes use 2row as the base, and my scale only goes to a couple pounds so I have to weigh it out 2# at a time.

    Currently I weigh everything out to the ounce, but its tedious at times.

    Does anyone use volume to measure(can or scoop) assuming you know how much said can of say 2row weighs?

    I realize its not the most accurate way of doing it of course, but is it close enough?
    Thanks!
    How do you do it?
     
  2. #2
    wilserbrewer

    BIAB Expert Tailor  

    Posted Jan 25, 2012
    Yes, I previously marked a plastic pitcher at 1lb and 2lb increments to measure base grain. I have since placed one pound marks on the 5 gallon water bottle hopper of my grain mill, and just fill the hopper w/ the amount needed. A few ounces more or less of base malt doesn't concern me.
     
  3. #3
    dyneq

    Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2012
    You could absolutely do it this way, but I would recommend weighing your 'reference' grain each time because moisture content may vary on each brew day.

    So weigh out a # and put it in a container that you can put a mark on (say, a big tumbler cup) and use that as your guide. Of course, you'll need to calibrate your cup for each type of grain and adjunct.

    All that said, I just bought an Escali Primo for about $21 shipped which can go up to 11#
     
  4. #4
    wickman6

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 25, 2012
    Thanks for the quick responses!

    I'll probably continue to measure out my specialty grains, hops and adjuncts, but the base grain I'd like to make easier.

    I too am not overly concerned about a few ounces either way on base malt. I love this hobby but time is often a pricy commodity having 2 kids and a baby in the house.

    Anything to shave a little time off is well worth it for me. So long as its not detrimental to the brew!
     
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