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I've always used a 25% per year viability loss estimate for old hops. That said, I'd dryhop with twice as much. Were they discounted or something?

this just dawned on me, is that means that if i use bittering hops from 2011 my calculated IBUs can be twice as high than what is actually in the beer?
 
Yup. If you use BeerSmith, it actually has a pretty handy calculator that can figure the amount of lost alpha acids, based on hop variety (apparently it varies), age, and storage method. Storing them at room temperature, for instance, is far different than vacuum packed in the freezer.
 
Yup. If you use BeerSmith, it actually has a pretty handy calculator that can figure the amount of lost alpha acids, based on hop variety (apparently it varies), age, and storage method. Storing them at room temperature, for instance, is far different than vacuum packed in the freezer.

I store them airtight in the freezer but i have no clue how my LHBS stored them. I use Brewtarget btw.

Different topic: I took a little sample (about 5% of the total wort) of my wort before the boil to measure OG, it is a 90min boil and i added the sample back to the pot after 20 minutes of boil time. Was that a mistake? (i mean did cooling the unboiled wort down to around 90F created some enzymes and stuff i don't want in my beer?)
 
I am looking at my first 1-gal batch later tonight or tomorrow evening. I have done 5 gal for about 12 years and not I want to start experimenting with "other" special ingredients but don't want to do 5 gal in case of a total failure. Also I have always done extracts with speciality grains but I am trying my first all grain with this one. I have read alot about the strike temps and mash temps and sparging but all with 5 gal batches. Here is what I was thinking but please feel free to correct me:

2# grains total (1# 2 row, 1# wheat) strike temp at 164*F for a mash temp of 152*F for 45 min. bring up to 170*F for mash out (~10-15 min) and remove grains. Bring to a boil and add hops as normal for a 60 min boil.

I look forward to your comments and suggestions as if I make a really great beer here I will turn it into a 5gal batch later to enjoy some more.

Thanks!

Ferment On!
 
Back to my question from two weeks ago.. Has anyone come up with either a 1g or 2g recipe for an Oatmeal Stout that turned out well? I'm not comfortable at the moment simply cutting a 5g recipe down to a small batch on my own.
 
Another question. I posted this elsewhere in this forum. I bought 4.. yes, FOUR Brooklyn kits. Looking forward to doing a few at a time.. possibly using different adjuncts or even different hops to pick up the differences in what a modified "smash" would do. Same grains.. but different hop.. not hops.. sounds like fun to me.

Anyhow.. for those of you who are chemical smart.. these kits come with a cleanser called "C-Brite" I have no idea if it will leave a residue as it warns about chlorine gas.. but, I think that likely has to do with possibly mixing it with another chemical.. like an acid that might cause it to emit that killer stuff. Sooooo, if you have any good info on C-Brite.. I'd appreciate it. I've seen it in restaurant supply stores for cleaning glassware.
 
I am looking at my first 1-gal batch later tonight or tomorrow evening. I have done 5 gal for about 12 years and not I want to start experimenting with "other" special ingredients but don't want to do 5 gal in case of a total failure. Also I have always done extracts with speciality grains but I am trying my first all grain with this one. I have read alot about the strike temps and mash temps and sparging but all with 5 gal batches. Here is what I was thinking but please feel free to correct me:

2# grains total (1# 2 row, 1# wheat) strike temp at 164*F for a mash temp of 152*F for 45 min. bring up to 170*F for mash out (~10-15 min) and remove grains. Bring to a boil and add hops as normal for a 60 min boil.

I look forward to your comments and suggestions as if I make a really great beer here I will turn it into a 5gal batch later to enjoy some more.

Thanks!

Ferment On!

The huge difference with doing all grain beer at 1 gallon vs. 5 gallons is the temperature drop during mashing. A 1 gallon mash just doesn't have the mass to hold the heat so I put my oven on its lowest setting (170) and place the mash pot inside. Some people turn off the oven right away, others half way through the mash time while I leave my on the whole mash time.

Other than that...the all grain procedure is roughly the same...and remember...RDWHAHB!
 
Back to my question from two weeks ago.. Has anyone come up with either a 1g or 2g recipe for an Oatmeal Stout that turned out well? I'm not comfortable at the moment simply cutting a 5g recipe down to a small batch on my own.

I brewed this 5 gallon recipe from 'Brew Your Own' as 2.5 gallons so I just halved all the ingredients. I didn't follow the same mash schedule....I just did a single step BIAB mash at 154 for 60 minutes....its was good enough that it was the first beer I finish of all my beers last Fall. And don't worry about cutting a recipe down...if its a decent recipe...cutting down won't 'ruin' it. I know its gets over said but it really does fit RDWHAHB!!!

http://byo.com/stout/item/2327-breakfast-of-champions-oatmeal-stout
 
Thanks Mark.. that's helpful..

I've just done my first 1G batch yesterday.. the Boston Brew Everyday IPA. BOY, was I surprised at the boil off.. I started with 2G of water.. half in the mash and half in the sparge per instructions. I don't have a marked spoon so I don't know how much water was absorbed.. but possibly 2 qts (?) Anyhow I did my 1 hour boil after sparging with the other 1.5 gallons and by the time I poured it into the fermenter I was left with only 1/2G. and a pretty high gravity.. so I topped it off with boiled and cooled RO/Tap water blend to 1G. Ended up with a 1.056 OG.

So, this brings me to my question which I should possibly ask as a different thread.. but let's see how this goes. I've never had an excessive boiloff doing 5G batches.. probably due to the size of the pot.. taller than diameter dimensions. However, for this 1G.. size matters I guess.

Assuming I know I will have a 1G boil off in my hour.. is there any problem with adding an extra gallon to the BK after I do the sparge? That way I won't have such concentrated wort that will have to be diluted later??? I know I can't do it before with sparge water cuz I run the risk of extracting tannins.

What say you 1 gallon brewers??? Lend a hand?
 
Thanks Mark.. that's helpful..

I've just done my first 1G batch yesterday.. the Boston Brew Everyday IPA. BOY, was I surprised at the boil off.. I started with 2G of water.. half in the mash and half in the sparge per instructions. I don't have a marked spoon so I don't know how much water was absorbed.. but possibly 2 qts (?) Anyhow I did my 1 hour boil after sparging with the other 1.5 gallons and by the time I poured it into the fermenter I was left with only 1/2G. and a pretty high gravity.. so I topped it off with boiled and cooled RO/Tap water blend to 1G. Ended up with a 1.056 OG.

So, this brings me to my question which I should possibly ask as a different thread.. but let's see how this goes. I've never had an excessive boiloff doing 5G batches.. probably due to the size of the pot.. taller than diameter dimensions. However, for this 1G.. size matters I guess.

Assuming I know I will have a 1G boil off in my hour.. is there any problem with adding an extra gallon to the BK after I do the sparge? That way I won't have such concentrated wort that will have to be diluted later??? I know I can't do it before with sparge water cuz I run the risk of extracting tannins.

What say you 1 gallon brewers??? Lend a hand?

I think it is ok to add water to top up your beer. I've seen here that water and wort does not mixes too well at this stage so your gravity readings can be off. I personally add water during the boil to keep the concentration low for better hop utilization.

(i do BIAB so i don't know anything about sparging)
 
Thanks Mark.. that's helpful..

I've just done my first 1G batch yesterday.. the Boston Brew Everyday IPA. BOY, was I surprised at the boil off.. I started with 2G of water.. half in the mash and half in the sparge per instructions. I don't have a marked spoon so I don't know how much water was absorbed.. but possibly 2 qts (?) Anyhow I did my 1 hour boil after sparging with the other 1.5 gallons and by the time I poured it into the fermenter I was left with only 1/2G. and a pretty high gravity.. so I topped it off with boiled and cooled RO/Tap water blend to 1G. Ended up with a 1.056 OG.

So, this brings me to my question which I should possibly ask as a different thread.. but let's see how this goes. I've never had an excessive boiloff doing 5G batches.. probably due to the size of the pot.. taller than diameter dimensions. However, for this 1G.. size matters I guess.

Assuming I know I will have a 1G boil off in my hour.. is there any problem with adding an extra gallon to the BK after I do the sparge? That way I won't have such concentrated wort that will have to be diluted later??? I know I can't do it before with sparge water cuz I run the risk of extracting tannins.

What say you 1 gallon brewers??? Lend a hand?

I noticed an excessive boil off when I switched to 1 gallon so I turned down the heat so I got nice moving boil and not the violent boil most brewers suggest....I know what your thinking but when I did 5gallons on my stove top I couldn't get a strong boil back then either and my beer tasted fine to me. Maybe I'm not picky but it worked for me. So when I went to a smaller volume of wort my stove could really boil it and I got the same result as you....3/4 gallon of concentrated wort. I think I topped up with water to the fermentor to get 1 gallon.

Otherwise you could just mash with extra 1/2 gallon water and sparge with an extra 1/2 gallon of water. You might need to play with your techniques to get the results you want...but that's the fun part.
 
I like the idea of of adding water during the boil to keep the level up.. rather than during the mash or sparge. It seems a great way to maintain the level without thinning out the mash too much or risking leaching tannins and sparging below a gravity of 1.010 which I've read you want to stay away from.

Fortunately this first 1g batch didn't need much of a blow-off.. I was worried about having so little headspace in the jug. I did add a blow-off.. but I think I only lost about 1-2 oz. It has dramatically settled after 36 hours. I see activity. but no bubbles.. so obviously airlock activity means nothing.. but I knew that already :D There is one HECK of a lot of sediment at the bottom of the jug. Be interesting to see how much beer I actually get out of the batch.. May be lucky to get a brewers 6 pack. We'll see. I've maintained the cooling bath at 67* through out.. not quite sure how that translates to the internal beer temp..

But, so far so good...

I'll do the rest of the 1g kits I got with the four Brooklyn kits I got on the BevMo sale.. Then I may just increase the recipe to make 2g batches and ferment in the MrBeer fermenters I bought and sell the 1g equipment on Craigslist. That should be easy. I don't know how well the "world" knows about that sale. I had to bring two of the four back due to thermometers being shipped upside down and the red liquid separated. Not many left.. But the big problem with the kits are that they are outdated. I still used them and they will likely make good beer. But BevMo is now selling the MrBeer Premium kits for about $10 off.

I bought my MrBeer fermenters directly from MrBeer.. they sell them for $10 ea and if you buy two, the shipping is reduced.. not bad. One thing good about them.. besides being larger is that they aren't breakable glass.. and they are dark brown.. so I don't really have to keep them covered with a towel in my spare bathroom/brewery during the day.

Lots of fun finding out about smaller batches. I found I didn't really have a shorter brew day tho. I prepared my tap water by boiling two days before and let it sit on the stove overnight to eliminate the chlorine. I also purchased a 5g bottle or RO water two days before.. that was taken care and I adjusted the chemistry of the water the day before. Brew day, I boiled the water.. that took less time base on the smaller volume.. but not much.. because I do my 5+ gal boils on a Blichmann burner which is HOT and boils that water rapidly.. Natural gas on the stove.. not nearly as hot. From that point on.. the rest was pretty much the same except for chilling. Chilling a 5g batch takes about 20 min with a chiller.. Chilling the 1g batch takes about 10m in the ice/water in the sink. The other adjustment I made was the mash pH.. I'm still learning to use the pH meter.. so, I'm not quite as adept at this as I will after doing it a few more times.. and learning how much acid to add to the mash to bring it to the proper value.

So the take away is.. doing the lower volumes wiil get better as I brew them more frequently.. and the process issues like water and mash chemistry will get faster as I do it over and over.

+1 for small volumes. :D
 
So, you 1g brewers.. I just brewed my first Brooklyn Everyday IPA kit.. I think I have more trub in the bottom of my 1g fermenter than when I brew a 5g ag. Do you find this also??? Sheesh.. I think I have a bout 1/4 trub. But I'm only 3 days into it.. some of it may disappear or compact???
 
So, you 1g brewers.. I just brewed my first Brooklyn Everyday IPA kit.. I think I have more trub in the bottom of my 1g fermenter than when I brew a 5g ag. Do you find this also??? Sheesh.. I think I have a bout 1/4 trub. But I'm only 3 days into it.. some of it may disappear or compact???

it will compact a bit

for example in one of my brews the trub kinda disappeared and i got only a huge amount of whiteish yeast left, it was like the yeast completely ate everything.

i like to filter my wort when i put it into the fermenter but when i bottle my beer i leave like 1/4 of it behind, the bottom is just too messy/yeasty.

to be honest i don't even get 10 bottles out of my batches
 
What is the best way to carb beer if you are bottling? I don't have carb drops or a scale... A tsp of table sugar in each bottle? Any help is much appreciated
 
So, you 1g brewers.. I just brewed my first Brooklyn Everyday IPA kit.. I think I have more trub in the bottom of my 1g fermenter than when I brew a 5g ag. Do you find this also??? Sheesh.. I think I have a bout 1/4 trub. But I'm only 3 days into it.. some of it may disappear or compact???

Don't worry (yet!). I suspect it will compact for you.

Lee
www.picobrew.co.uk
 
So, you 1g brewers.. I just brewed my first Brooklyn Everyday IPA kit.. I think I have more trub in the bottom of my 1g fermenter than when I brew a 5g ag. Do you find this also??? Sheesh.. I think I have a bout 1/4 trub. But I'm only 3 days into it.. some of it may disappear or compact???

cold crash (just put it in the fridge) the gallon jug 2 days before you plan on bottling.


-=Jason=-
 
I plan my recipes to have about 1.5 gallons of wort to be chilled in the kettle, then siphon into two separate gallon carboys leaving about 1/4 gal behind so I dont suck up any break material. I use two carboys in order to leave space for the krausen. After 2 weeks I cold crash and siphon the beer off the trub from both carboys and combine them into one for dry hopping or I just bottle at that point. Head space doesn't affect the beer in primary, so in order to get closer to a full gallon I split the fermentation.
 
I live in an apartment with my SO and two cats, not a lot of kitchen or workspace available so getting started on home brew with 1 gallon kits has been a dream I'm glad a friend introduced me to.

When we eventually get more space and upgrade to larger equipment I still plan on using the 1 gallon carboys to test out recipes and scale up the ones I find work well.

So, you 1g brewers.. I just brewed my first Brooklyn Everyday IPA kit.. I think I have more trub in the bottom of my 1g fermenter than when I brew a 5g ag. Do you find this also??? Sheesh.. I think I have a bout 1/4 trub. But I'm only 3 days into it.. some of it may disappear or compact???

This was the first kit I ever cooked up myself not long ago, was happily surprised how well it turned out even though I can count how many places I'd messed up the recipe (cheap apartment stove is hard to maintain a temp on).

I did find the trub was huge at the bottom but leveled out by bottling time. I was a bit sloppy on siphoning so still ended up with a pile of sediment at the bottom of the bottles, but nothing terrible.
 
schmeek said:
I plan my recipes to have about 1.5 gallons of wort to be chilled in the kettle, then siphon into two separate gallon carboys leaving about 1/4 gal behind so I dont suck up any break material. I use two carboys in order to leave space for the krausen. After 2 weeks I cold crash and siphon the beer off the trub from both carboys and combine them into one for dry hopping or I just bottle at that point. Head space doesn't affect the beer in primary, so in order to get closer to a full gallon I split the fermentation.

That's a great idea. I did my first one gal batch of beer recently, and even with putting in almost a full gallon into the fermentor (I used a blow-off tube, knowing that the head space was limited), I still ended up with only about 3/4 gal after racking off the trub to lager. I think I'll give this a try next time. Also, Making one wort into two one-gal fermentors would be a good way to compare two dif yeasts, dry-hop vs. no dry-hop, add fruit to half, or some other side by side experiment (without blending them back into one, of course)...
 
FatsSchindee said:
Making one wort into two one-gal fermentors would be a good way to compare two dif yeasts, dry-hop vs. no dry-hop, add fruit to half, or some other side by side experiment.

This is my favorite use for one gallon batches. My memory is imperfect so side-by-side is the only way for me to see how small changes effect an outcome. It also lets me perfect a recipe 5 times faster.
 
FatsSchindee said:
That's a great idea. I did my first one gal batch of beer recently...

And here's the recipe for it, a Bohemian Pilsener brewed with brown sugar (I just posted it in the recipe forum as well, with more of a discussion about what I used and why):

Brown Sugar BoPils 1 Gal

Style: Bohemian Pilsener OG: 1.051
Type: Partial Mash FG: 1.014
Rating: 0.0 ABV: 4.79 %
Calories: 166.64 IBU's: 32.33
Efficiency: 78.00 % Boil Size: 1.90 Gals
Color: 6.8 SRM Batch Size: 1.00 Gals
Preboil OG: 1.030 Boil Time: 90 minutes

Grains & Adjuncts
Amount Percentage Name Time Gravity
8.00 ozs 32.00 % Pilsner (2 Row) Ger 45 mins 1.037
2.00 ozs 8.00 % Cara-Pils/Dextrine 45 mins 1.033
1.00 ozs 4.00 % Caramel/Crystal Malt - 10L 45 mins 1.035
4.00 ozs 16.00 % Briess DME Pilsen 90 mins 1.043
8.00 ozs 32.00 % Briess DME Pilsen 0 mins 1.043
2.00 ozs 8.00 % Brown Sugar, Dark 0 mins 1.046

Hops
Amount IBU's Name Time AA %
0.25 ozs 16.52 Saaz 60 mins 3.20
0.25 ozs 12.70 Saaz 30 mins 3.20
0.13 ozs 3.12 Saaz 10 mins 3.20
0.13 ozs 0.00 Saaz 0 mins 3.20

Yeasts
Amount Name Laboratory / ID
75 B cells Southern German Lager White Labs 0838

Additions
Amount Name Time Stage
0.25 each Whirlfloc Tablet 150 mins Boil

Mash Profile
Profile Name: Partial Mash

Grain Temp: 78.00 °F Mash Tun Vol Loss: 0.00 Gals
Grain Absorption: 0.13 Gals/lb Tun Temp Loss: 4.00 °F
Cooling Shrinkage: 4.00 % Kettle Trub Loss: 0.13 Gals
Hourly Boiloff: 0.50 Gals/hr

Mash Steps:
Mash (BIAB) 45 [email protected]°F
Add 0.80 qts water @ 172.2°F
Dunk Sparge 10 [email protected]°F
Add 0.50 qts water @ 170.0°F
(null)
Sparge 6.66 qts water @ 0.00 °F

Water Profile
(none)

Fermentation Steps
Name Days / Temp
Primary 20 days @ 50.0°F
Primary 7 days @ 64.0°F
Lager 46 days @ 34.0°F

Carbonation
Bottle Carbonation
Desired Vol of CO2: 2.30 Vols
Beer Temperature: 75.00 °F
Residual CO2 in Beer: 0.78
Corn Sugar Required: 0.61 ozs

Notes
(none)
www.iBrewMaster.com Version: 1.0.9

The attached pic shows it (on the right) next to the standard of the style, Pilsner Urquell...

image-3152195875.jpg
 
cold crash (just put it in the fridge) the gallon jug 2 days before you plan on bottling.


-=Jason=-

Actually, the beer is clearing nicely from top to bottom.. but, the sludge on the bottom, while compacting.. is still huge. For a 1g batch.. I'd guess it's almost as much as I get in a 5g batch.. not quite.. but a lot.
 
What is the best way to carb beer if you are bottling? I don't have carb drops or a scale... A tsp of table sugar in each bottle? Any help is much appreciated

I find it easier to bottle prime with Domino Dots. They are 1/2 teaspoon sugar cubes (check the size, there are two, I'm told). One in each bottle works fine.
 
I find it easier to bottle prime with Domino Dots. They are 1/2 teaspoon sugar cubes (check the size, there are two, I'm told). One in each bottle works fine.

Do you use the smaller dots? Sounds like a better deal than carb drops if they work good.
 
Awesome I made a simple syrup with 2tbs and mixed that in before bottling... So fingers crossed it not over carbed or under carbed...
 
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