What did you learn this week? | Page 5 | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

What did you learn this week?

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by dadshomebrewing, Nov 23, 2012.

 

  1. Hamsterbite

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    I'd be concerned more with the cold side end of brewing out in the wind. There's tons of dust/pollen etc kicking around and that's bound to get into your wort and infect it.
    Just make sure you keep a lid on it after flame out, and take it indoors before opening.
     
  2. Toadsticker

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    I had a huge boiloff, ended up closer to soup than wort. Was cooled to 70° in 15 minutes. Topped off to 5 gal with cold spring water, pitched at 43°. Current results, at 63°:

    ForumRunner_20121216_115641.png

    To the many who have helped me improve here, I thank you.
     
  3. Hamsterbite

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    A couple other things that might help you get some improvements on your next batch:

    43f is too cold to pitch. Generally, lager yeast is pitched cooler than ale yeast, but your best bet it to follow the yeast suppliers pitch range for that particular strain. They can vary.
    Your beer isn't necessarily ruined because of that, but the yeast will produce some off flavors, and/or may not fully attenuate leaving you with a sweeter/lower alcohol beer than you intended.

    If you are going to top off with cold water, it's best that it's been pre-boiled and cooled before doing so. Also, seems lime you may know this already, but don't use tap water if you're on city water as the chlorine causes fermentation problems.

    Cheers!
     
  4. Jon73

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    I learned just how satisfying it is to throw away a whole bunch of empty bottles because your loving wife gave you three corny kegs for an early xmas present.
     
  5. GeorgiaTiger

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    NOOOOO!!! I NEED those bottles! Did you already toss em?
     
  6. GeorgiaTiger

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Dec 16, 2012
    but grats on the kegs...lucky baastad
     
  7. Toy4Rick

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 17, 2012
    I learned today that if you close the refrigerator door and the picnic tap is pinched between the door and the keg, the rest of the beer in the keg will begin flowing out the bottom of the frige AND the Co2 bottle will frost up as it dumps all it's contents into an empty keg and right out the open tap. :mad:

    Good thing for me there was only abut 2 pints left in the keg, however I did lose about 4 lbs of Co2 before i got back out there to pour another glass and found it.

    Watch where the taps are at when you close the door

    Toy4Rick
     
  8. dadshomebrewing

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 22, 2012
    i learned that even when you are standing there looking at it, a boilover can go really quick, so you need something in your hand, like a squirt bottle, or spoon.

    if not you will have something else in your hand to clean up the mess on the wife's stove.
     
  9. dbrewski

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Dec 22, 2012
    Fermcap S. Once I started using it I never stopped. I don't have to worry about boilovers now.

    On to the learning part. I learned the hard way that once hops get old enough you really have to take the degradation into account and adjust your recipe. I had several really under-hoppy batches. Bitterness was OK, just not the flavor I was hoping for. Today I brewed and adjusted my recipe using this, a hops aging calculator a member put together. I am crossing my fingers!
     
  10. starsman20

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Dec 23, 2012
    I learned that when doing a 1.5 l starter in a 2 l flask the krausen will over flow. What I need to know is how fast to run the stir plate. I just had it going enough to keep the yeast in suspension but I have lost a lot of yeast. The krausen is mostly yeast it looks like.

    image-3235648816.jpg
     
  11. starsman20

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Dec 24, 2012
    What I really learned was that if you put 1c dme in 1.5 l for a starter it's too much. The question now is is this useable?
     
  12. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Dec 24, 2012
    That it's some kinda damn law that unionrdr shall be broke every holiday by lawyer's decree. No tree either,MF'r. No gifts for either,bitch. I pay & I pay & I pay...what do I have to show for it? Disgrace & abuse. I've had some fierce hard times,but this is the worst. It's Christmas eve,no tree,no nuthin. Not even a cig & a beer nor shot of anything. I hope y'all have a great holiday. Seriously. Mine's ruined. Every year the same thing. Just hit bottom & I'm stuck here. Scroogey muther ****ers around here. Can't wait till freakin January to get there scratch.
     
  13. dcocch

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 7, 2013
    I learned that getting a 5gal bucket and using that for the sanitizer mixture makes everything easier. I also learned that my LHBS, while small and fugly from the outside, actually has a nice selection of hops!
     
  14. Toadsticker

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    That I forgot to refill my LP tank. Also, that my miserable apt stove won't boil 2 1/2 gallons of wort hard enough to Get a boilover even when bridging 2 burners. (Elect.)
     
  15. Brewtah

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    Seems every week I learn something. I have only brewed 6 batches. I read the Yeast/Fermentation section everyday.
    I learned my Grandma was right "patience is a virtue". My Christmas Ale is good, after 2 months in the bottle.
    I discovered using frozen granite samples placed under my hot pot help with my wort chiller to cool it down even faster.
     
  16. twalte

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    I am learning how to use a stir plate...and started reading the book Yeast. Seems like we do not give yeast enough credit for the taste of the final product, so I see a lot of yeast experimentation in the future.
     
  17. philly224

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    When you open a bottle that has only been bottled a week prior make sure to do it over the sink :D

    I want to taste one per week just to see how the beer changes so I cracked one open tonight. Unfortunately it over flowed onto the counter. After doing searching on here I learned that this is fairly common and is probably because all the CO2 was in the head of the beer and was not absorbed into the liquid yet. Beer was still flat but tasted okay!
     
  18. Johnnyhitch1

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    I Spend WAY to much on commercial beer...
     
  19. LoloMT7

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 10, 2013
    +1
    I always do that too..
     
    Johnnyhitch1 likes this.
  20. fuzzy2133

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    Even though the side burner on my out door grill is rated the same as the cook top in the kitchen there is a big difference in how well they work. The cook top inside is way better.
     
  21. bobot

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that chinook hops are some powerfully bitter hops!!!
    :D :D :D
     
    histo320 likes this.
  22. bfinleyui

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that it IS POSSIBLE to get through a brew day without an emergency run to the grocery store, LHBS, or hardware store (or in some cases, all three). First time that's ever happened for me, only took about 8 frantic brewdays.
     
  23. starsman20

    Supporting Member  

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that drilling a small hole in a SS keg is not as easy as it would first appear.
     
  24. Obliviousbrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I´ve learn that if you are going to bed late at nigth and your SWMBO is asleep, it´s always better to turn on a ligth and have a disagrement that blasting your face against a door frame, that´s going to leave a mark...
     
  25. Chuu

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that all grain is not as hard as I thought it would be :))
     
  26. buzzno

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned when direct heating an Erlenmeyer flask on the stove for a starter to not have it too full and watch the heat like a hawk! Bad sticky boilover!

    Also learned that I didn't allow for enough head space in my carboy for shaking up airation once I pitched. I have a stuck fermentation and need to repitch now. I think the purchase of some oxygen and SS diffuser might be a good idea.
     
  27. thisoneguy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that I can get an AG brew day done, from getting equipment out to having everything cleaned and put away, in about 4 hours...

    Hopefully that can be routine.
     
  28. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned to have all the lil stuff cleaned & sanitized before assembling everything & storing. It took all week to get time to clean every lil nit picky piece again for bottling day. Like spigots,hoses,tubes,vinator, Make sure scale batteries are good,etc. Couldn't believe how many little things comprise all that's needed to get the job done.
     
  29. dadshomebrewing

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    i learned how much i miss it when i don't get to brew on a weekend, and what a complete butthead i turn into.

    :)
     
  30. Cheapo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 13, 2013
    I learned that I should mark the gallon amounts on my brewing spoon.

    And that carbonation will make this weak beer I bottled taste way better
     
  31. jakeperks

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    I learned that I can get 5 or 6 more efficiency points and end up with lots more wort with brew in a bag by undertaking some very rudimentary lautering. I managed 70% rather than the 65% I was expecting.
     
  32. grem135

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    I learned that you need to make sure all water is out of your IC before puttig it in your boiling wort. Hot steamy water shooting out at you and your new hardwood floor is not a fun time.
     
  33. philly224

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    Haha I learned the same thing this weekend. Luckily I was outside in the garage though.
     
  34. grem135

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    Wish I had a garage. I would rather clean that then SWMBO's kitchen
     
  35. BansheeRider

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    Rig a blowoff tube for all beers for now on
     
  36. jakeperks

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 14, 2013
    Funny, I learned that today too.
     
  37. BrewChem

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2013
    I learned that if you're not paying attention... the bottom of a corny keg, especially when wet, can leave nasty, hard-as-hell to clean, SWMBO pissing-off ring shaped stains on carpet...
     
  38. Zoo_Guy_FL

    Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2013
    I learned to remember that all this brewing equipment has different cleaning needs. My thrumometer is trash cause I've cleaned it carelessly and now it's starting to corrode
     
  39. Zoo_Guy_FL

    Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2013
    I started using them when I switched to better bottles
     
  40. tjwor

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 15, 2013
    I learned that you should take your mash tun size into consideration when deciding to do a large party-gyle brew w/ 26lbs of grain! (luckily I discovered this before starting my mash so I could adjust the recipe for a regular mash)
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder