muleskinner90
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Thanks, cheesecake! Just learned what cold crashing mean. Will it hurt to cold crash it on the 20th day and bottle on the 21st day?
cheesecake said:Nope as long as fermentation is complete
Speaking of that, I am on my way to buy a hydrometer and have a brew. What is the best way to use a hydrometer on a 1 gallon batch without losing the sample? Can I just make sure the hydrometer and sample jar are sanitized and pour it back in?
I would let it ferment for another week and then cold crash it for 24 hours and then bottle it. Cold crashing will help everything fall out. Just put the fermenter in the fridge to cold crash
muleskinner90 said:It is an attached garage. I do have the Star San in the airlock.
truekey said:Made a 1 gallon partial mash batch today. Amber DME, Vienna and crystal 60 malts. I decided to be brave and did a hydrometer reading before I dumped the rest into my primary. 1.060... Hoping to get 6% ABV
I love one gallon batches because I get to stay warm in my kitchen.
BGBC said:Woo! Ordered the ingredients for my first two 1 gal batches last night. Strategically planning two brews I think my fiance will enjoy (Brandon O's Graff and a Honey Wheat). Gotta get her buy-in early!
bellmtbbq said:200 pages! Congrats folks.
I'm brewing that Munich to Kiwi Pale Ale I was talking about last weekend, Friday. I'm hoping I'll enter this in my first competition but who knows.
fifthcircle said:Did my first one gal batch yesterday. (been doing 5gal for about 1.5yrs)
I wanted to try a tiny batch with some new to me hops. NZ Hallertau and Pride of Ringwood. I went for an IPA style. Got a little under 1gal in the growler...bummed about that.
Also, I didn't really think about it, but when I was messing with the recipe in Beersmith, the littlest change dramatically changes the beer. I think 1gal brewing is harder than 5gal, in that respect.
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dougen said:my frist batch of brewing beer..a 1 gallon kit from brooklyn brew shop chestnut brow ale(christmas gift-i make wine so this is a change),didnt add the chestnuts thou but an all grain kit...if it comes out good have to ask my buddies for their bottles...lol
i know there is no bung and blow off tube just took a pic before i put them on
muleskinner90 said:Just performed my first gravity reading. Didn't take an OG reading. Today is the 16th day since brew day. Brewing an Irish Red Ale. Gravity reading tonight was 1.006. Going to take one tomorrow and the next. If no change, will cold crash on Sunday and bottle on Monday. I bought a wine thief yesterday but can't use it because it won't fit through the neck of my fermenting jug. Sanitized a turkey baster and used that tonight. Used the wine thief as a sample jar.sanitized everything. Returned sample to jug. Everything sound good with my procedure?
What he said.Good to go!
Nice, welcome!
Smart move BGBC
GO FOR IT! Good luck
I agree fifth circle. Sometimes the 1 gallon brews are quite difficult when scaling down. I noticed sometimes that beersmith would delete ingredients ( make it zero) when my initial amounts were very small in a 5 gallon batch like 4-6 oz so now I don't check the box to match sometimes when scale way down and play with it from there.
That's sounds like a great kit. Keep us posted!
You're almost there muleskinner. You can actually take a sample and then wait 2 days and take another. No change and your good to go. That way you save one sample.
Hardy kiwi is a type of vine. It can grow to zone 5 and does nicely here in MA. The fruits are the size of a large grape, same green color and less fuzz on the outside. Very, very sweet, sort of like a concentrated New Zealand kiwi. Vines take several years before they produce. Uh, I'm getting carried away with gardening again.I just found out I can grow kiwi outdoors here. I'm kinda confused, I like in Colorado. Isn't kiwi a tropical plant?
Sounds okay to me. I'd just be extra cautious cleaning that turkey baster.
Today, even though this isn't a good thing, I'm particularly proud. I got beer fermenting so hard right now I got some foam coming out my blowoff tube. Temp is a constant 66 degrees. It's the Nottingham ale yeast.
So I'm having a bit of a conundrum.
I am getting ready to buy my kit and stuff and I come across a website that sells Amber Glass Bottles (you know like the same basic color as the brown bottles used for brewing) and they sell them in packs of 4 for 18 bucks. Pretty great deal but shipping is also 18 bucks.
So do I buy the bottles that will keep out more light and be less likely to get skunky beer but pay 9 bucks each, or do I go with the clear glass jug from the LHBS for 5 bucks a pop.
Those better be way bigger then beer bottles. Northern brewer sells a case of 24 of those for 12 bucks. http://www.northernbrewer.com/shop/brewing/brewing-equipment/bottling/beer-bottles-12-oz.htmlSo I'm having a bit of a conundrum.
I am getting ready to buy my kit and stuff and I come across a website that sells Amber Glass Bottles (you know like the same basic color as the brown bottles used for brewing) and they sell them in packs of 4 for 18 bucks. Pretty great deal but shipping is also 18 bucks.
So do I buy the bottles that will keep out more light and be less likely to get skunky beer but pay 9 bucks each, or do I go with the clear glass jug from the LHBS for 5 bucks a pop.