cjl6
New Member
Woke up at 7:30, got all of the water ready, started heating it, it just got up to temp and I mashed in 6 gallons of 167 degree water to 17.5 pounds of grain...
11 Lbs. Pale 2 row
2 Lbs. Crisp Brown Malt
2 Lb. Dark Munich Malt
1 Lb. Briess Organic Chocolate Malt
1 Lb. Simpsons Extra Dark Crystal Malt (155-160L)
0.5 Lbs Simpsons Medium Crystal Malt (50-60L)
1 lb of honey
2 oz. Centennial Hops
2 oz. East Kent Golding Hops
First beer is going to be Old Man Winter, an imperial porter, hopefully around 1.090. Second one is going to be Jack (Torrance) Frost and I wouldn't know how to describe it, maybe as a British bitter, and should be 1.040.
So far I have mashed in at 155 only to realize that the big spoon I use to stir my mash only goes halfway down the mash tun. I grabbed the broom and used it's handle to stir the mash. Hopefully, I wont be this forgetful the entire brewday.
Quick question: I only have one brew kettle (the one I let someone borrow is "out on loan" so I couldn't get a hold of my other one) so I'm planning on doing these batches separately. I'll do this by extracting the first runnings, getting that boiling and (batch) sparge another 6.5 gallons into a plastic bucket. Once Old Man Winter is done boiling, I will chill it, dump it into another bucket, then boil Jack Torrance. Anyone see any ill effects of leaving 155 degree wort in a (food grade) bucket for that long? I figured if my mash tun was plastic and it's planning on sitting in that for 2 hours, why not a different bucket for another few hours?
Edit: I just realized this is my first post on this forum. I was just booted off Northern Brewer (I have no idea why) so I've been lurking here lately. I'm a senior biology student in Upstate NY. I'm here to represent the thousands of college students who brew.
11 Lbs. Pale 2 row
2 Lbs. Crisp Brown Malt
2 Lb. Dark Munich Malt
1 Lb. Briess Organic Chocolate Malt
1 Lb. Simpsons Extra Dark Crystal Malt (155-160L)
0.5 Lbs Simpsons Medium Crystal Malt (50-60L)
1 lb of honey
2 oz. Centennial Hops
2 oz. East Kent Golding Hops
First beer is going to be Old Man Winter, an imperial porter, hopefully around 1.090. Second one is going to be Jack (Torrance) Frost and I wouldn't know how to describe it, maybe as a British bitter, and should be 1.040.
So far I have mashed in at 155 only to realize that the big spoon I use to stir my mash only goes halfway down the mash tun. I grabbed the broom and used it's handle to stir the mash. Hopefully, I wont be this forgetful the entire brewday.
Quick question: I only have one brew kettle (the one I let someone borrow is "out on loan" so I couldn't get a hold of my other one) so I'm planning on doing these batches separately. I'll do this by extracting the first runnings, getting that boiling and (batch) sparge another 6.5 gallons into a plastic bucket. Once Old Man Winter is done boiling, I will chill it, dump it into another bucket, then boil Jack Torrance. Anyone see any ill effects of leaving 155 degree wort in a (food grade) bucket for that long? I figured if my mash tun was plastic and it's planning on sitting in that for 2 hours, why not a different bucket for another few hours?
Edit: I just realized this is my first post on this forum. I was just booted off Northern Brewer (I have no idea why) so I've been lurking here lately. I'm a senior biology student in Upstate NY. I'm here to represent the thousands of college students who brew.