So, I brewed my third batch yesterday and it was supposed to be a wheat, Wounded Trout Wheat. Murphy's Law was present during this boil. I should have seen the signs and stopped
. Heh, who am I kidding... I had to have one of my previous homebrews and enjoy the day!
You can read the entire blog entry and see all of the pics on my site BrewingExperiment.com
Recipe
5 lbs Wheat Dry Extract
8 oz Cara-Pils
.5 oz Amarillo Gold Hops
.75 oz Orange Peel
1 lb Orange Blossom Honey
Belgian Wit Ale Yeast (WLP400)
Est. Gravity: 1.051
Measured Gravity: 1.056
Slight issues started while washing the equipment.

After fixing the fermenter, it was time to brew. As a newbie, I expect certain things to get mucked up. I pushed the limit with my boil (and paid for it) this time. I have a 6 gallon pot and tried to boil five. Now, I know brewing extract I don't 'Need' to boil that much water, but you guys can give me a hard time about it; it's ok. My reasoning was to see what boiling five gallons would be like, achieve better hop utilization, and to see if the burner could actually handle that much. I guess I figured out the answer to one of those
Well, I steeped the grains and all was fine. Added the DME, all was fine. I made sure to keep a very close eye on the wort when it was coming up to boil temp.
So far, so good. The hot break had occurred and no boilover. Added the hops and...BAM!!!
It get's better, check out this sad sight.
It was like an explosion and happened in about 3 seconds. I took my eye off of it to start the timer for the hops and it was on!
Like I said earlier, you guys can read up on all of this on my blog so I won't go into all of the details, just a few of the good ones. Well, here's how it all ended... After the batch was finished, I siphoned the wort through the counterflow chiller and into the fermenter. Last time, this went pretty quick and I had amazing results. This time, it started off really well. Then the flow had slowed. What could be wrong now, a few of those damn orange peel pieces were stuck inside the chiller, rendering it impossible to use. I mean nothing was coming out of it. I tried to get it cleared and failed miserably. After messing with it a few minutes, I had to take the batch inside for an ice bath and to finish up...
What did I learn:
First and foremost, keep a CONSTANT eye on the kettle until the nice rolling boil has started. Yes, even during the first hop addition. Also, plan for plan B. Wait, theres more I need a filter on the siphon (in the kettle). Still going I may want to have an extra bag of ice on hand if i have to use an ice bath again. Whats the worst that can happen, bad beer that I make? It will still be better than the American Lite Pilsners!
Through all of this, while irked, I was relaxed and enjoyed my homebrew... Just goes to show (to me at least) enjoying the fruits of your labor does make a bad situation easier to laugh at! Heh, what a day!
Eric
You can read the entire blog entry and see all of the pics on my site BrewingExperiment.com
Recipe
5 lbs Wheat Dry Extract
8 oz Cara-Pils
.5 oz Amarillo Gold Hops
.75 oz Orange Peel
1 lb Orange Blossom Honey
Belgian Wit Ale Yeast (WLP400)
Est. Gravity: 1.051
Measured Gravity: 1.056
Slight issues started while washing the equipment.
Let me back track just a sec... I had noticed in previous batches that my spigot leaked just a tiny amount. Not enough to do anything other than put a little sticky wort on the bottom side of the bucket.
So, back to the day... I had washed the bucket and left some water in there to see if it still leaked and I would address it if needed. Well, it did leak. So, I tightened the nut on the inside and thought... "Done". Wrong; drip, drip, drip, drip.... After taking the spigot off, I noticed the thing was cracked almost in half (where the threads met the part of the spigot that goes outside the bucket). What to do now... Off to Lowes to buy a pvc plug, cause the homebrew shop isn't open on Sunday's. What a way to start off... This was the first sign for me to maybe do this another day. After fixing the fermenter, it was time to brew. As a newbie, I expect certain things to get mucked up. I pushed the limit with my boil (and paid for it) this time. I have a 6 gallon pot and tried to boil five. Now, I know brewing extract I don't 'Need' to boil that much water, but you guys can give me a hard time about it; it's ok. My reasoning was to see what boiling five gallons would be like, achieve better hop utilization, and to see if the burner could actually handle that much. I guess I figured out the answer to one of those

Well, I steeped the grains and all was fine. Added the DME, all was fine. I made sure to keep a very close eye on the wort when it was coming up to boil temp.

So far, so good. The hot break had occurred and no boilover. Added the hops and...BAM!!!

It get's better, check out this sad sight.

It was like an explosion and happened in about 3 seconds. I took my eye off of it to start the timer for the hops and it was on!
Like I said earlier, you guys can read up on all of this on my blog so I won't go into all of the details, just a few of the good ones. Well, here's how it all ended... After the batch was finished, I siphoned the wort through the counterflow chiller and into the fermenter. Last time, this went pretty quick and I had amazing results. This time, it started off really well. Then the flow had slowed. What could be wrong now, a few of those damn orange peel pieces were stuck inside the chiller, rendering it impossible to use. I mean nothing was coming out of it. I tried to get it cleared and failed miserably. After messing with it a few minutes, I had to take the batch inside for an ice bath and to finish up...
What did I learn:
First and foremost, keep a CONSTANT eye on the kettle until the nice rolling boil has started. Yes, even during the first hop addition. Also, plan for plan B. Wait, theres more I need a filter on the siphon (in the kettle). Still going I may want to have an extra bag of ice on hand if i have to use an ice bath again. Whats the worst that can happen, bad beer that I make? It will still be better than the American Lite Pilsners!
Through all of this, while irked, I was relaxed and enjoyed my homebrew... Just goes to show (to me at least) enjoying the fruits of your labor does make a bad situation easier to laugh at! Heh, what a day!
Eric