Hi - I have been mystified by this for some time and thought this forum could shed a light on the approach to be taken. I like the fact that the AHA publish the recipes for the NHC award winners and I have made several of these brews. Similarly I read through Zymurgy or BYO, Craft Beer & Brewing and see recipes I would like to make.
Now some recipes are designed for 5 gallon batches, some 5.5 into the fermenter, some into 40L Speidel fermenters, some 'traditional' all grain, some BIAB. What is the right approach to take when entering these recipes into BeerSmith, Brewfather or whatever program you use? Should I enter the recipes as published with a default equipment profile and efficiency? Then tweak the efficiency and volumes to arrive at the OG, SRM, ABV and IBUs as specified? Then scale the recipe to the volume being brewed. Then change the equipment profile to BIAB.
Is that the right sequence or is there a better approach to brew a proven award-winning recipe on a different rig. The recipes in magazines or recipe stashes online rarely specify the details of the rigs on which they were brewed.
Paul
Now some recipes are designed for 5 gallon batches, some 5.5 into the fermenter, some into 40L Speidel fermenters, some 'traditional' all grain, some BIAB. What is the right approach to take when entering these recipes into BeerSmith, Brewfather or whatever program you use? Should I enter the recipes as published with a default equipment profile and efficiency? Then tweak the efficiency and volumes to arrive at the OG, SRM, ABV and IBUs as specified? Then scale the recipe to the volume being brewed. Then change the equipment profile to BIAB.
Is that the right sequence or is there a better approach to brew a proven award-winning recipe on a different rig. The recipes in magazines or recipe stashes online rarely specify the details of the rigs on which they were brewed.
Paul