cheesecake
Well-Known Member
once i get everything figured out with this mash tun ill work on clarity
I've done a few one gallon batches before, they are a great way to do side by side comparisons of different ingredients. So usually when I make a one gallon batch I will do 2 or 3 in a day, although once I did six - that was a long day of brewing, but I definitely got a system down. And it's great to have a variety pack so that you can choose what to drink on any given night.
Here's a neat trick that I have found. Go out and by a gallon jug of water (either distilled and add salts or just buy spring water), use that for the boil. After the boil is complete, you can pour the wort back into the jug. The amount of boil-off is about right for the head space during fermentation. Just drill a hole in the cap and fix a cheap aquarium tube with a few rubber bands as a blowoff tube.
If you have a large rectangular cooler that isn't being used as a mash tun, you can add a few inches of cool water and fit up to six jugs in there to ferment. This works really well for fermentation temp control.
One thing I also noticed with the small batches is my 5 gallon thin pot vs my bigger 8 gallon and 15 gallon pots is thermal mass of the pot. I noticed my bigger pots obviously held more heat so they would change a lot less over the mash when I BIAB. but the smaller pot is thinner and now that its colder is affected quite a bit more. I will try the oven trick when SWMBO ain't home but I will have to bring out the old mash tun to hold temps during this colder weather.
Speaking of holding temps and such, I did a test boil of 1.5 gallons in my 3 gallon pot (the $9 one from Walmart) yesterday, and noticed that the boil I was able to achieve was pretty weak. According to my digital thermometer the temp was 1-2 degrees shy of boiling for the entire thirty-minute test. How much of a concern is this gonna be, and what (if anything) do I need to do to compensate for it when I actually have wort in the pot? Do I boil longer? Somehow split the boil into two batches and blend afterwards? RDWHAHB? Inquiring minds want to know!
Speaking of holding temps and such, I did a test boil of 1.5 gallons in my 3 gallon pot (the $9 one from Walmart) yesterday, and noticed that the boil I was able to achieve was pretty weak. According to my digital thermometer the temp was 1-2 degrees shy of boiling for the entire thirty-minute test. How much of a concern is this gonna be, and what (if anything) do I need to do to compensate for it when I actually have wort in the pot? Do I boil longer? Somehow split the boil into two batches and blend afterwards? RDWHAHB? Inquiring minds want to know!
There is another thread on here called "stovetop brewing tips" or something like that. They have all sorts of tips to make sure you get a boil going...such as wrapping the sides with insulation or tin foil. Try keeping the lid on until you get the boil going. Then take it off
BigRock947 said:I won't disagree that the thickness of the pot can contribute but the amount of water and pounds of grains of 5 gallons vs 1 gallons is probably a huge factor too.
EDIT: My first 1 gallon batch I had a brain fart moment. I tried to brew exactly like do 2.5 gallon or 5 gallon batches. I was having trouble figuring out why my temps weren't holding. Duh. Not the same amount of mass.
@flipfloptan: Yeah, I'll be BIAB'ing too. I'm not so much worried about there being an extra step as I am potentially overshooting the mash-out temp and getting into temperatures that can start to pull out undesireable compounds, you know?
As far as swamp cooling vs. dom fridge - unfortunately, I'm brewing in a day or two, and the budget (both money and space) doesn't allow me to pick one up. However, I do have a plastic bin, water, and a fan, which is why I'm curious about the swamp cooler technique. A dorm fridge *may* be in the cards eventually, but for now I'm thinking as small as possible. Thanks for the ideas though. :rockin:
cheesecake said:I would switch the hops up. use the Willamette earlier and the centennial later.
Thats personal preference i love centennial
Good tips on the mashing out. I suppose I'll give it a go and see what happens.
Re: swamp cooling vs. dorm fridging - like I said, I have neither the money nor the space for a dom fridge at the moment, which is why I'm so curious about the swamp cooler idea. I don't doubt that a small fridge would be great, but it simply isn't in the cards right now.
I think I have a problem......I spent too much money on specialty grains today. I bought every grain needed to brew everything in my 1 gallon batch section in beersmith.
View attachment 84433
I did some transfering and bottling today transferred galaxy SMaSH. Bottled northern brewer black ipa kit. I will be bottling my citra smash tomorrow.
Your right, you do have a problem.....I think I have a problem......I spent too much money on specialty grains today. I bought every grain needed to brew everything in my 1 gallon batch section in beersmith.
View attachment 84433
I did some transfering and bottling today transferred galaxy SMaSH. Bottled northern brewer black ipa kit. I will be bottling my citra smash tomorrow.