bellmtbbq
Well-Known Member
Working on finishing my five gallon Igloo mash tun today so I can move up to 2-2.5 gallon batches. A case per a batch is probably the ideal number for me
MrOneTwo said:Greetings. I'm new to the forum and have been exclusively one-gallon brewing for about a year now. I just have a quick question when it comes to converting recipes. My LHBS will put together one-gallon recipes for me, but he seems to get annoyed when I come in asking for 1.6 oz or .08 oz (or some other strange amount) of an ingredient. Especially when there are multiple cases in one recipe. So do you all stick with the weird measurements or do you round off? Does it make much of a difference?
MrOneTwo
MrOneTwo said:Greetings. I'm new to the forum and have been exclusively one-gallon brewing for about a year now. I just have a quick question when it comes to converting recipes. My LHBS will put together one-gallon recipes for me, but he seems to get annoyed when I come in asking for 1.6 oz or .08 oz (or some other strange amount) of an ingredient. Especially when there are multiple cases in one recipe. So do you all stick with the weird measurements or do you round off? Does it make much of a difference?
MrOneTwo
Hey, what happened with the black napalm anyway?I did a step by step walkthrough of last nights brew if anyone wants to take a look at it. (and yes this may just be more shameless "hey look at my blog" posts, but I don't care)
http://onegallonbrewing.blogspot.com/2013/01/batch-013-killer-bee.html
Hey, what happened with the black napalm anyway?
Hmm. Time should take care of the "hot" flavor. I agree, it sounds like you need a bittering agent. My first thought would be oak as well. Though tannic acid or even tea wouldn't be bad either.Racked to a tertiary fermenter last week, and took a sample into to work for done people to try. Its.....weird. A lot of toffee notes, pretty hot tasting. I need to add something but I'm not sure what, the first guess is oak, but haven't made that decision yet.
Hmm. Time should take care of the "hot" flavor. I agree, it sounds like you need a bittering agent. My first thought would be oak as well. Though tannic acid or even tea wouldn't be bad either.
heya all I also do 2.5 gallon batches.. they are great I think!!! Question for you guys... how much break material do you have left over... I do my batches to end up with 10L ow wort, but this last time, I ended up with about 5L woth of break/trub after cooling....thats a huge loss, I do BIAB! but still 50% break/trub loss is way too much!!! any ideas, whats your average loss guys???
I've searched and cannot seem to find it....I want to split a 5g batch into 1g. What is the best way to bottle the 5 seperate batches? Thanks guys.
Hey all, getting ready to bottle my first 1 gallon brew. The bottling sugar tablets came with the kit, but I was wanting to add priming to the entire batch and then bottle. Question is, how much of the sugar and how much water do I boil? Hopefully this makes sense. Thanks in advance for your help.
Now I see... Lol. You are officially the biggest one gallon brewer I know ...lol awesome dude!
JollyIsTheRoger said:I use about just about 1 oz of sugar for 1 gallon and adjust depending on if I got less then a gallon or not. And I use about 4 oz of water, it just needs to dissolve the sugar.
zeg said:I just bottled my first 1-gallon batch, a quick "lager" I made out of a big WLP833 starter for a Maibock. (It fermented in about 4 days at room temperature and "lagered" for a week at 50°F... surprisingly drinkable despite that process abuse.)
I'm thinking about doing a couple more 1-2 gallon batches over the next few months. I'd like to do some all-grain barleywines and my BIAB setup can probably just manage up to about a 1.5 gallon batch. Haven't decided what to do for a primary container, but I think I'll age them in 1-gallon cider jugs.
I'm thinking I'll do two batches, an English (EKG hops) and an American (probably Cascade + Simcoe). I figure this is a good style to do in small batches since it's a bit of a specialty beer---I don't expect to be drinking it very frequently, and I really don't want to tie up my big fermentors for months for bulk aging. It's bad enough with a 5 gallon batch of mead perpetually sitting there in the closet, mocking me...
For primary, I'm thinking of either getting a couple of Mr Beer fermentors, the cheap 2-gallon fermentors from Midwest Supplies, or scrounging something.
BlakeL said:I went back to basics over the holidays and did a test 1 gallon batch of a Mexican Milk Stout that should be ready to drink in a few weeks. The recipe is below and I'll let you guys know if it's any good. However it turns out, I'll be making a 2.5 gallon batch and will adjust the recipe for whatever it's lacking.
Grains:
1 lb 3 oz Briess Golden Light DME
3 oz Lactose
2 oz Crystal 80L
2 oz Black Patent
1 oz Crisp Chocolate Malt
1 oz Victory Malt
Hops:
1/4 oz EKG @ 60 min.
Yeast:
Safale S-04
Miscellaneous:
1/4 Ancho Chili @ 5 min.
1/4 Guajillo Chili @ 5 min.
1/4 Cinnamon Stick @ 5 min.
1 1/2 oz Cocoa Powder @ 5 min.