The beauty of 1 gallon brewing. .. 3 batches bottled in 1 day.
Pissentrough... now that's a name. Were those slender bottles once Dogfishheads?
The beauty of 1 gallon brewing. .. 3 batches bottled in 1 day.
(originally in all grain, someone suggested moving here)
i have also started a thread on beersmith's forums:
http://www.beersmith.com/forum/index.php/topic,11688.0.html
sorry fuzzy, i should have made this part clearer. the temp problem is a mystery also because i have a 5 gallon mash tun for smaller batch sizes, not a ten gallon. and my one gallon batch size was really 3.5 gallons into the 5 gallon mash tun which doesn't seem like it should have lost temps like it did. i am going to be experimenting with pre-heating the tun but i really doubt that should be necessary. something else to get to the bottom of. i am still sceptical that this caused my miles off gravity numbers as the original question still remains and looks very fishy to me - does only 2.5 lbs of vienna in a 3.5 gallon beer really give you a 1.060 beer?
You're right.....2.5 lbs of grain in 3.5 gallons of beer shouldn't give you a 1.060 beer. Here's is what i think happened. Now this is based on my testing Brewers Friend but I image Beersmith would be similar. Your OG gravity is based on the 1 gallon setting in BS. When I played around with BF's settings...ie.. a 1 gallon beer and various boil volumes the gravity didn't change because the final volume was the same...1 gallon. Now when I changed the final volume going into the fermentor the gravity changed.
I think BS is assuming your boil off is bringing you down to 1 gallon and thus a 1.060 OG....
Believe I'm not an expert so somebody else please chime in...
The efficiency question deals with 3 types of efficiency...Pre-boil, Post boil and Brew house efficiency. Your pre-boil gravity of 1.020 based on 3.5 gallons of wort is roughly 70%.
What was your post-boil gravity and volume?
well, this is somewhat embarrassing to admit but... i checked the gravity, threw it into the carboy, added yeast and promptly umm forgot what the hell the gravity was. at this point i didn't really care much anymore to tell the truth. i had corrected the screwed up pre-boil gravity with DME (a lb and a half!!!) and collected just over 1 gallon of wort. it really doesn't matter anyways with the smash experiments i have been doing as i am more just checking out the hop profiles anyways. as for your calculation of my efficiency for this brew being 70%, my normal efficiency is 69.3% so that would be almost spot on with my usual efficiency. so what the hell?
edit: and yes i see what you are saying that the software assumes that you boil down to 1.060. however that does not tell me how i am supposed to get to a preboil gravity of 1.039 when i got 1.020 preboil (which, as you confirmed, was what i should have got with my normal system efficiency of 69-70%. how am i supposed to get all the way up to 1.039???).
(originally in all grain, someone suggested moving here)
my efficiency for this brew was 35%. that's not even possible, the usual for me is 69%. why does beersmith show the estimated mash eff for this at 156%??? i know mash eff goes up as the batches get smaller, but can you really hit 156% efficiency in the real world?
I brewed a one gallon smash with 2.6 lbs of Vienna. going by beersmith's calcs, my pre-boil volume was 3.4 gal which I hit. OG on this beer is supposed to be 1.060, and my pre-boil gravity was supposed to be 1.039. I hit a preboil gravity of 1.020.
i got the 35% efficiency by simply adjusting the tot. efficiency number on the top of beersmith downward until i got 1.020 (what i actually got) for estimated preboil gravity on the mash page. that turned out to be 35% tot. efficiency.
mash eff here happened by blind luck to be the same as my usual tot. efficiency. is this correct?
the big question in my mind still is why did this happen? other than missing on my mash temp nothing out of the ordinary happened here to account for why i would only get a 35% total efficiency?
also i don't understand this: "When you raise the loss to trub, BS keeps the OG constant and simply raises the mash efficiency to compensate.
I guess this means that I ALWAYS have this trub loss.
in a larger batch, say 5 gallons, it would not be as noticeable because it's a smaller percentage and although I may not hit my gravities exactly it will be close enough. but as batches get smaller, it becomes a larger percentage and more noticeable and when I hit a one gallon batch it became a huge deal. yes?
if so, the same two questions as always. doesn't beersmith account for this?
number two though: how do I fix this, compensate for this?