Big Monk
Trappist Please! 🍷
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2015
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It stayed between 62-64 the entire fermentation period.
Where and how are you measuring fermentation temperature? How are you controlling temperature?
It stayed between 62-64 the entire fermentation period.
Where and how are you measuring fermentation temperature? How are you controlling temperature?
Hi, I’m new so I’m not gospel. But have you read the Palmer book? That water is 7.2 and you need 5.2-5.6 for mash.
Using a chest freezer with inkbird. I have a temp strip on the bucket.
You mention medicinal, chemical flavors. Where is the Inkbird taking it's temp reading from?
Water pH and mash pH are different things. Mash pH, even without any treatment is always lower than the source water's pH.
Sorry, ill bow out lol.
I have it in a jar of water in the freezer, seems to work pretty well.
My suggestion? Brew and extract batch and ferment it as normal and see if you like the flavors you get, in a general sense. This could tell you a few things:
a.) If the off flavors persist into the Extract batch, it may be a fermentation/sanitization issue you are having;
b.) If the off flavors are not present in the extract batch, you may have an issue with how you are executing your all-grain batches.
This is an issue of troubleshooting and you need a clean baseline to be able to determine where to put your energy.
This is a great thought. I really don't want to go back to extract, but you're right that it would give me some needed info.
How were your extract batches compared to the (new) all grain ones?I really don't want to go back to extract
How were your extract batches compared to the (new) all grain ones?
Which extracts?
Using the same water?
Have others than you and your wife tasted your beer? Such as homebrewers you know (or a homebrew club)?
You may be very sensitive to bitterness or just not like it (yet).Super bitter taste, like so bitter it's hard to taste anything else.
Reminds me of west coast IPAs during the IBU craze.
That's definitely an important sign something is indeed off.However the smell is straight up medicinal chemicals.
High mineral water is generally good for brewing dark beers. Stouts are also very forgiving, the roast can hide a lot too.many said [it] was the best stout they'd ever had (it was extract). I was using Boulder tap water then.
So, compared to your old setup you changed:using my old AG rig I had also placed in a couple homebrew competitions. That was using Boulder tap water as well.
You may be very sensitive to bitterness or just not like it (yet).
What is your favorite commercial or craft beer?
That's definitely an important sign something is indeed off.
Does the Eldorado water itself smell of chlorine or anything chemical?
Does it come in large (5 gallon) plastic carboys to put onto a water dispenser?
High mineral water is generally good for brewing dark beers. Stouts are also very forgiving, the roast can hide a lot too.
So, compared to your old setup you changed:
Did you ever thoroughly clean your new rig to remove machining oils and residue? Re-passivate the stainless?
- Water
- Brew rig
- Brew method (all grain vs. extract)
Not sure you mentioned it, what sanitizer do you use?
Alright, now we're talking. You understand (good) bitterness.I don't think I'm super sensitive to bitterness, some of my favorite beers are IPAs.
Sounds pricey...The Eldorado water smells and tastes like good water to me - comes in 1 gallon jugs.
Another thought, you say you heat to 158 then add grain, Did you verify the accuracy of your thermometer? It may be reading 158 but actually be something else all together, set you thermometer in boiling water to verify it reads212F. Oops, I see you in Boulder, make that 201F.
I looked it up on a google search. Their chart said 201.5 I figured the point 5 could be dropped. But I guess rounding up makes sense.More like 202F at Boulder's Elevation of 5328 feet. But who's counting?
I looked it up on a google search. Their chart said 201.5 I figured the point 5 could be dropped.
Another thought, you say you heat to 158 then add grain, Did you verify the accuracy of your thermometer? It may be reading 158 but actually be something else all together, set you thermometer in boiling water to verify it reads212F. Oops, I see you in Boulder, make that 201F.
Hopefully your current brew is perfect! Did you taste the boiled wort? I always do.I think the possibility of the wort scorching is low due to the design of the foundry, but it still seems like a possibility. Like I said, I get it to a boil really quickly at 240v. I'm definitely going to back down the power to maybe ~75% next time to see if it helps. Great idea... not sure I would have thought of this!
I don't have a profile for Boulder water, but I know it's generally considered soft for brewing. The Eldorado water is $1/gallon which is a bit annoying. My latest beer (in fermenter now) I used tap water + a campden tablet.
Not much of a difference, but the lower boil temp can cause 2 things.Not that it really matters much, but at 5328 feet, water boils at 202.4F, at least per the standard calculators.
Not much of a difference, but the lower boil temp can cause 2 things.
- Somewhat higher boil off (evaporation), and
- Somewhat lower hop utilization, reducing alpha acid isomerization, resulting in somewhat lower bitterness.