doublebogey10,
Let's walk through this step by step.
After 10 minutes I stir thoroughly and check temp (usually have to turn on the heat for a few minutes), then I stir and check every 10-15 min. After my 60-90 min mash I raise temps to 170 for 15 minutes. Then I squeeze the bejeezus out of the grains.
I like to use THIS CALCULATOR to figure out my water needs. Absorption set to .08, equipment and trub loss to .25 each (for MY system). If you do full volume boils you only need to worry about Total Water Needed, not mash or sparge water. It took some work, but I figured out my boil-off is 13%.
I usually end up with 6 gallons in the kettle, 5.5 gal in fermenter, 72% efficiency, or 85% for session ales. I may try a finer crush to bump that up a little, but I'm more concerned with consistency than anything, which I'm definitely getting.
Let's walk through this step by step.
- So you get your grains online, crushed by the retailer? It might be a good idea to get a mill. Some shops have wider gaps than others and (especially online shops) aren't willing to adjust or double mill. I have a Barley Crusher and use the default mill gap.
- When you mash, do you stir and check temps frequently?
- Do you mash-out around 168-170 for 15 minutes?
- Do you squeeze or sparge?
- Is your boil-off percentage correctly factored?
After 10 minutes I stir thoroughly and check temp (usually have to turn on the heat for a few minutes), then I stir and check every 10-15 min. After my 60-90 min mash I raise temps to 170 for 15 minutes. Then I squeeze the bejeezus out of the grains.
I like to use THIS CALCULATOR to figure out my water needs. Absorption set to .08, equipment and trub loss to .25 each (for MY system). If you do full volume boils you only need to worry about Total Water Needed, not mash or sparge water. It took some work, but I figured out my boil-off is 13%.
I usually end up with 6 gallons in the kettle, 5.5 gal in fermenter, 72% efficiency, or 85% for session ales. I may try a finer crush to bump that up a little, but I'm more concerned with consistency than anything, which I'm definitely getting.
Doubt it.So, do I have a hydrometer problem?
Do you have the appropriate batch size and efficiency set?Is there something about that free Brewtoad software that might be off?