Stas StoLat
Member
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2018
- Messages
- 24
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- 10
No well. Just don't pour any sediment into a glass from a cold bottle. Chilling the bottle before serving leaves the sediment behind.
What I do these days is toss in ~3-5 mL of BioFine into the fermenter about a day or two before I'm going to transfer, and then you can really hoover every last drop off of the yeast cake since it's so beautifully compacted. Short of this, you're trading between haze and the associated "yeasty" flavor, and loss of a precious half pint
Also, it seems I net 7 pints out of every gallon batch
Clear fermenters rock, and honestly I have been loving the heck out of my 6qt Cambro fermenters - get one of these (but get one at a restaurant supply for less than half of that price), toss two of these in the lid, toss a thermowell in one of those, and throw one of these on the front and you have the best 1 gal fermenter in the biz
And as for yield, that sounds about right. I'd guess I maybe get 7.5 with BioFine, though I keg most often so it's hard to be sure
Oh no worries whatsoever, these make my life easier but they're not by any means a necessity - the option's always there if you want to drop some cash on a bells-and-whistles option that verges on overkill
Do you brew larger than 1 gal as well? I think I remember other posts where you have made some sweet eBIAB 1 gal equipment yourself.
Haha I'm glad that at least one person noticed that! And a good question - I used to run the "Staff Batch" program at the brewery at which I work (hint: it's on my T-shirt), so I've done a fair number of 5/10 gallon batches, but 1 gallon is just so fantastically low stress that I haven't done one in a while. Granted, I just made a radical upgrade to my gear wherein my heating element now tri-clamps into my kettle, so I intend to use that as an excuse to set up a parallel 3 gallon setup with nearly identical equipment (same element and controller, same HERMS coil/chiller) whenever I feel like blowing a few hundo, which is sure to be shortly
But yeah, I'm with you on the 2.5 - if I'm not experimenting, and thus know I'm very likely to make a killer beer, I'd like ~2.5-3 gallons of it in the future
Buy a scale that measures 0.1grams. And use brewersfriend priming calculator.So I bottled yesterday... and siphoning from the carboy was smoother than the first time. But bottling was a pain... only due to the Fizz Drops! I will never, ever, use these again! What a pain... they dont fit most of the 16oz bottles I have! Had to cram them into the openings increasing risk for infection.
I want to continue to bottle from primary and add priming sugar to each individual bottle. What is the best way to do this? Best!
Buy a scale that measures 0.1grams. And use brewersfriend priming calculator.
I do have the small anvil scale to use.
Ok so it looks like that calculator works on a 16oz calculation as well (.125g). Which sugar best … I suspect corn sugar? Also, what's the risk for infection? ie not putting sugar in solution and boiling? Thanks!
So I bottled yesterday... and siphoning from the carboy was smoother than the first time. But bottling was a pain... only due to the Fizz Drops! I will never, ever, use these again! What a pain... they dont fit most of the 16oz bottles I have! Had to cram them into the openings increasing risk for infection.
I want to continue to bottle from primary and add priming sugar to each individual bottle. What is the best way to do this? Best!
Paging @TwistedGray
1/2 tsp table sugar funneled into each bottle. Maybe slightly more for 16oz bottles
I use brewing sugar (pure glucose) from the homebrew shop. Table sugar and corn sugar works also but not as fast.
No infections as long as everything is clean. At least I haven't had any infections this way or heard anyone else suffering infections. I think it doesn't differ from using carb drops of sugar cubes in this matter.
I’ve use Twisted’s method since I asked him about it a while back. It works better than other methods assuming you get the right amount in each bottle. I’ll never do anything else with my 1 gallon batches.I finally made a thread about this - Individual Bottle Priming Instructions with Cane Sugar
Imma just make a damn thread already, lol.
What's your carbonation times using "brewing sugar" to carbonate compared to cane sugar (aka "table sugar")?
I usually like to give my beers one week to rest in the bottle to ensure all the sediment settles, and they're plenty carbonated at that stage. Depending on the style, I'll give them two full weeks to carbonate, settle, and condition before starting to chuck them in the fridge.
It would be very interesting to see a brewing day of yours!
What's your carbonation times using "brewing sugar" to carbonate compared to cane sugar (aka "table sugar")?
I
Haha fair enough! I filmed parts of one which I should get around to finally posting, but I also made some substantial upgrades after that, so there may be another one after that. In any case, I'll get on it!
The pictures were a help ... giggle lolI finally made a thread about this - Individual Bottle Priming Instructions with Cane Sugar
Imma just make a damn thread already, lol.
The pictures were a help ... giggle lol
What's your carbonation times using "brewing sugar" to carbonate compared to cane sugar (aka "table sugar")?
I usually like to give my beers one week to rest in the bottle to ensure all the sediment settles, and they're plenty carbonated at that stage. Depending on the style, I'll give them two full weeks to carbonate, settle, and condition before starting to chuck them in the fridge.
Table sugar needs usually 2 weeks.
Brewing sugar makes good carbonation in one week.
At least in my brews.
BU remember that bottle conditioning is more than just carbonation. So 2-3 weeks is my normal "ready beer". But it's nice to taste a bottle in 1 week with good carbonation (at least ipas and neipas)
If you use fresh raspberries, it might be better to freeze and then thaw them first. It breaks down the cell walls and releases more juice!
Interesting recipe... going to add it to my list!
That container looks nice and solid, if you don't mind sharing, what is it? I recently picked up a couple of cheap (thin) PET jugs for 1G experiments, but I'm not sure how long they'll last.Hey all,
I make tons of weird and merely fairly pleasant beers, but this was a banger. The only hassle is that you have to add the raspberries like 90% of the way through fermentation to ensure that the yeast will eat the sugars (or don't I guess!), and the recipe is virtually exactly this one but rephrased for 1 gallon. If you want an Easy Win like I did, give it a shot
Oh, and use whole, frozen raspberries (or hell, fresh)
View attachment 699275
That container looks nice and solid, if you don't mind sharing, what is it?
Clear fermenters rock, and honestly I have been loving the heck out of my 6qt Cambro fermenters - get one of these (but get one at a restaurant supply for less than half of that price), toss two of these in the lid, toss a thermowell in one of those, and throw one of these on the front and you have the best 1 gal fermenter in the biz