dtfleming
Well-Known Member
Has anyone tried the AHS 1 gal recipes?
Fill in the blanks on this http://hbd.org/cgi-bin/recipator/brew/widgets/bp.html
And racking in this case is siphoning from your fermenter to bottling bucket.
How necessary is it to rack to a bucket? Why not just fill the bottles directly from the fermenter? I was going to use a mini autosiphon and spring-tip bottle filler. Any reason not to go this route?
The only reason to not go that route is because you'd have to find a way of mixing in the priming sugar solution without stirring the yeast back into suspension and get a lot of trub in your beer. That why we have bottling buckets.
You can bottle from primary if you use tabs, but you'll have to put up with the over carb issue.
jwalk4 said:Would you wait until you had 5, 1-gallon batches in the fermenter before you pitched your yeast?
If so, I foresee a problem if any bacteria should find its way into the fermenter. The sugars may be (in part), already consumed by bacteria by the time you finally pitch your yeast, and thus, you'll have competing cultures. Also, you'd risk oxidation.
If you pitch your yeast after 1 1-gallon brew, then just continually add wort, I would be concerned about the under pitching your yeast.
You would have to re-pitch yeast everytime you add more wort, but with the reproduction of yeast cells in the wort already, you would have to account for the number of daughter cells to gain an accurate amount of how much yeast you'd have to pitch every time.
Honestly though, I have no experience in this matter. These are just my .02 on possible outcomes. I would love to hear a Mod's opinion.
Would you wait until you had 5, 1-gallon batches in the fermenter before you pitched your yeast?
If so, I foresee a problem if any bacteria should find its way into the fermenter. The sugars may be (in part), already consumed by bacteria by the time you finally pitch your yeast, and thus, you'll have competing cultures. Also, you'd risk oxidation.
If you pitch your yeast after 1 1-gallon brew, then just continually add wort, I would be concerned about the under pitching your yeast.
You would have to re-pitch yeast everytime you add more wort, but with the reproduction of yeast cells in the wort already, you would have to account for the number of daughter cells to gain an accurate amount of how much yeast you'd have to pitch every time.
Honestly though, I have no experience in this matter. These are just my .02 on possible outcomes. I would love to hear a Mod's opinion.
Hmm, this seems likely. If it was my project I'd probably just keep the batches separate if I had the fermentors for it. That way you could make variations with each batch.I'm not sure there'd be much of an oxidation risk---wouldn't the yeast kick back into their aerobic metabolism mode and remove the oxygen like they do with the intentionally oxygenated wort at the start of a standard process?
zeg said:I'm not sure there'd be much of an oxidation risk---wouldn't the yeast kick back into their aerobic metabolism mode and remove the oxygen like they do with the intentionally oxygenated wort at the start of a standard process?
Leadgolem said:Hmm, this seems likely. If it was my project I'd probably just keep the batches separate if I had the fermentors for it. That way you could make variations with each batch.
Revvy said:Honestly Jeff, I haven't seen many brewers turn their noses up and small batch brewing, and if they do, we hit them with a rolled up newspaper. Over the last few years small batch brewing has been looked at as being OK....Even one gallon batches thanks to the Brooklyn Brew Kits.
The basic brewing folks I think went a long way into given 1 gallon batches cache.
Plus it's never been sneered at for wine/mead and cider makers. I gallon batches are quite common on that front.
I prefer 2.5 gallon batches for small batch beer brewing, because 2.5 gallons = 1 case of beer.
But there's nothing wrong with 1 gallon batches if folks want to brew them. In fact I'm looking for some 1 gallon wine jugs as we speak.
I have seen one gallon wine jugs filled with sangria for about $10. Thought I would buy one and them I would have two 1gallon batches brewing at the same time.
cheesecake said:Yum sangria. . .post a pic or info I want a gallon of sangria
Good to know.I'm really not sure about the oxidation risks either. I know most nano breweries do this during fermentation. Say they do 1bbl batches, a lot of them use 2bbl fermenters. Brewing 1 and pitching yeast, next day brew and add the second bbl.
I'm not sure what member(s) did the Sam Adams Utopias clones, but they used to brew so much, aerate, pitch yeast. Brew, add to fermenter, aerate. Brew, add to fermenter, aerate, over and over again to not over stress the yeast which huge quantities of high gravity wort.
I don't have the fermenters for this. Even if I did, the 10-12lb grain bills for each batch are in a large bag. So theres no way of splitting the different types of grain. Basically I take the complete grain bill for a 5g batch, have it crushed and vacuum sealed in a large bag, so on brew day just cut a corner off the bag and dough in.
Antler said:I been doing 5 gallon BIAB on a propane burner since this spring. Lately it's been really cold and windy so holding mash temps outside will be a nightmare. I already have 2, 2 gallon pots. Been thinking about just doing 1 gallon batches in the kitchen until I can afford an electric setup to put in my 5g system.
I already have 3 batches worth of grain here, mixed and crushed, in large vacuum sealed bags. How can I brew these in 1 gallon batches and combine in fermenter?
I was thinkin to start it all in my 7.5g fermenter. 1g at a time and each couple days brew up another 1g batch and add to the fermenter.
divrguy said:Are you able to do multiple batches in a day and then combine them?
Do two side by side sessions, ending up with 5g into the fermenter in a single day?
zeg said:That sounds like a plan! If you have an immersion chiller, just stagger the parallel tracks by half an hour to give you time to chill and then swap the IC over.
zeg said:Ah. My IC fits both my 5-gal and 2-gal pots, and it's absurdly fast in the 2-gal.
Are you using a bucket? This is probably obvious, but it's a serious safety issue so I'll point it out anyway, do be cautious pouring hot wort into a fermentor. It can bust glass carboys, shrinky-dink Better Bottles, and [something something] buckets. (I have no idea what, if anything, it might do in a bucket, but it'd be worth checking out the temperature tolerance of the plastic).