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  1. beretta

    Looking for 40 oz bottles, Capable.

    has anyone heard of crown-cappable 40oz bottles OK for homebrewing? I see the are some 32 oz varieties, but I'm not finding much else. Any suggestings? Beretta
  2. beretta

    Stout Fail

    That's what I was thinking... maybe the grain wasn't cracked. He reported to me that he steeped his grains for 20 minutes... as much as I do when all-graining. I've never done a partial extract brew, so I'm not sure what went wrong. the only problems I can think of is: (1) using uncracked...
  3. beretta

    Stout Fail

    I'm not sure about his gravity, but mine's usually in the 1.040's. I imagine his would have to be similar with 6 lbs of extract. This is a 5 gal batch lengh, btw. I'm thinking the problem must be his "dark roasted barley" isn't as dark as mine. Mine's usually very black (like patent) on the...
  4. beretta

    Stout Fail

    Howdy, Extract Brewers! I passed along a Irish Stout recipe to my brother, and extract/partial grain brewer who reports that this recipe failed: 6 lb. Amber DME 1 lb dark roasted barley 1/2 lb flaked barley Yeast + Hops (kent golding) In his words: "My stout from the recipe you gave...
  5. beretta

    all grain Question?

    For every pounds of grain there is a certain maxium amount of sugar you can extract from it. Base-Pale malts have the highest, and darkest grains have the least. To calculate effiency, brew up a batch. When done lauddering (or after chilling post-boil) measure the gravity and volume of beer...
  6. beretta

    why didnt you guys tell me?

    I tried quick bread (soda bread, beer bread, etc...) once with spent grains and it's flavor was great. However, I was turned off by the dagger sharp husks. They scratch my throat and got stuck in my teeth. Did I do something wrong?
  7. beretta

    starting a second batch before first batch finishes?

    Congrats. If you plan not to buy beer at stores, you will find you have more motivation to bottle. Bottling's charms will wear off fast. I haven't bought a appreciable amount of "store" beer in 3 years. Of course, going to the doctor's office is always fun when they ask: "How much do you...
  8. beretta

    Just cracked open my first homebrew...

    Congratulations! Welcome to the obsession. Your first homebrew was a All-Grain?!?! Wow! That's ballsy.
  9. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    Here's today's results using my new sparge method: 7 lb 2row pale malt .5 lb caramel malt .5 lb roasted malt .3 lb roasted barley 8.3 lbs total Post-boil, I ended up with 5.1 gals of 1.050 point wort... so... 255 pt*gals. 255 / 8.3 gives 30.7 pts/gals*lbs. I'm figuring my theoretical max...
  10. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    Agreed. I'm saying that the downward force isn't due the the pressure, its the cause by *water flowing* in a downward direction and dragging the grains down with it. I've never worried about temperature during sparging. Should I? I mash-out at what ever rest temp I ended up with (152F)...
  11. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    Ok... I could see that being a disadvantage to my proposed mashing method. I remember from my days while taking care of a small pond: silt is amazingly floculant and will be a water proof barrier if you let it.
  12. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    Maybe. I'm thinking that the density of the grain bed and the depth would counteract the pressure of the extra water... sorta of an ohm's law type relationship. If you bed depth or density get too much, your flow will crawl to a stop. So rather than I=V/R, you would have Flow Rate = PSI /...
  13. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    That sounds about right... if I remember at 15 psi (weight of air at sea level) will push a column of water 32'.. so 15/32 = .45-ish psi per foot of water. I don't think PSI has any effect on the dynamics of lauddering, if you keep flow rate constant. I guess, my thoery is: if you have the...
  14. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    Well, I'll be trying this again tomorrow. As far as dilution goes... I guess there is a couple of ideas why I'm not worried: 1. wort is denser: its lower temperature (158F) than sparge water (170F), and it's apparent SG is more. I last week's laudder of a stout, I could see the wort - water...
  15. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    from my understanding of hydrodynamcis, 28" as compared to 20" of depth would give you around 28/20 times the pressure at the bottom of the tun, or 1.4 x. I also thought that the more weight of water would compact the bed more, but I'm not sure of the physics behind that... I think worse...
  16. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    err... yes, english sparge = fly sparging. I guess the advantages are: 1) You don't disturb the grain bad, so no reason to recirculate the wort more than once. 2) The laudder doesn't require contant attention like normal fly sparging. 3) Contrary to my guess, this sparge has "pushed" a stuck...
  17. beretta

    Mixing ac & dc on a mechanical dpdt relay

    In general, you should be able to do this. Remember that you're only switching 1 line of the AC, which is fine if your dealing with 120V, not so fine with 240V (or more) as the higher voltages of AC have 2 hot wires, and you can only break one.
  18. beretta

    New guy from rural Pa

    Welcome. The pressure canner will serve you well. Make sure to check out the cheese-making forum too..
  19. beretta

    Propane Turkey Fryer Indoors?

    No. Please don't. The primary poison to worry about is CO (Carbon Monoxide). It's heavier than air and will slowing fill up your basement from the ground up. You'll have lethal levels before the CO reaches your windows, which I'm assuming are above your head.
  20. beretta

    Lazy Man Sparge

    During my last 2-3 batches I've gotten pretty lazy during my sparges. After about fifteen minutes of a regular english style sparge (after the grain bed settles), I simply opened the valve on my HTL, and emptied 3-4 gallons of sparge water into my MT. I ended up with about 7-8 inches of sparge...
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