jmitchell3
Well-Known Member
Firstly, this is not an April fools post, this actually happened today and it seems the joke may be on me...
So my buddy and i from the homebrew club got together "borrowed" components for a big brew day today. Big beer, 52.5 lbs of grain for 15 gals preboil, targeting preboil gravity of 1.089 at 70% efficiency using a fly sparge.
Long story short, we doughed in our 2.5 brown bags of grain, hit our initial mash temp within 1.5F, hit our pH perfectly at +45 mins (remaining in 60 min mash), and commenced with refract readings from samples at 30 mins. 1.042. Then 1.054 at 15 mins. At this point we are thinking WTF. Did a conversion test with iodine, it indicated full conversion.
Started to runoff first runnings, just over 1.060. What is going on?!? We are thinking. Upon completion of fly sparging for 45+ mins we are still at 1.056 blended runnings. We have already begun heating the mash, try recirculating the hot wort (176F or so) back through the tun as a batch sparge. Did that for 30+ mins thinking maybe we could pick up additional sugars, and nada. Even added another gallon of fresh water to try and get something happening.
Collected 16 gals at 1.057 OG, representing an unbelievably low 48%. I couldnt try to mess up a mash and get 48% efficiency!!!
We started going over our figures as the boil commenced trying to find where we went wrong. We found nothing after triple checking our calculations, objective observations, etc. (Note: We are both relatively moderate to advanced homebrewers, with many many all grain batches under our belts. This was our first collaboration brew.)
We decided to go a bit further, and after draining all residual wort from the mash tun, we scooped out and weighed our spent grain. Assuming a mash grain absoprtion of .12 gallons per lb of grain, we estimated we should have pulled almost 100 lbs of spent grist from the tun (52.5 lb of grain * .12 * 8.33 lb per gallon plus our original grist weight...). The weight of the grist pulled from the tun was just over 66 lb leaving an estimated 36 lb of grist + water unaccounted for. That would, apparently, mean we may have been up to 18 lbs short of our paid-for 52.5 lbs of grain, which, to us, is unbelievable and suggests our lhbs operator may have shorted us almost 40% of our grain bill.
After an insanely exhausting 9 hour brew session, I would be grateful if anyone could help figure out what went awry and if it is infact plausible based on the evidence that our lhbs really screwed the pooch.
Thank you!
So my buddy and i from the homebrew club got together "borrowed" components for a big brew day today. Big beer, 52.5 lbs of grain for 15 gals preboil, targeting preboil gravity of 1.089 at 70% efficiency using a fly sparge.
Long story short, we doughed in our 2.5 brown bags of grain, hit our initial mash temp within 1.5F, hit our pH perfectly at +45 mins (remaining in 60 min mash), and commenced with refract readings from samples at 30 mins. 1.042. Then 1.054 at 15 mins. At this point we are thinking WTF. Did a conversion test with iodine, it indicated full conversion.
Started to runoff first runnings, just over 1.060. What is going on?!? We are thinking. Upon completion of fly sparging for 45+ mins we are still at 1.056 blended runnings. We have already begun heating the mash, try recirculating the hot wort (176F or so) back through the tun as a batch sparge. Did that for 30+ mins thinking maybe we could pick up additional sugars, and nada. Even added another gallon of fresh water to try and get something happening.
Collected 16 gals at 1.057 OG, representing an unbelievably low 48%. I couldnt try to mess up a mash and get 48% efficiency!!!
We started going over our figures as the boil commenced trying to find where we went wrong. We found nothing after triple checking our calculations, objective observations, etc. (Note: We are both relatively moderate to advanced homebrewers, with many many all grain batches under our belts. This was our first collaboration brew.)
We decided to go a bit further, and after draining all residual wort from the mash tun, we scooped out and weighed our spent grain. Assuming a mash grain absoprtion of .12 gallons per lb of grain, we estimated we should have pulled almost 100 lbs of spent grist from the tun (52.5 lb of grain * .12 * 8.33 lb per gallon plus our original grist weight...). The weight of the grist pulled from the tun was just over 66 lb leaving an estimated 36 lb of grist + water unaccounted for. That would, apparently, mean we may have been up to 18 lbs short of our paid-for 52.5 lbs of grain, which, to us, is unbelievable and suggests our lhbs operator may have shorted us almost 40% of our grain bill.
After an insanely exhausting 9 hour brew session, I would be grateful if anyone could help figure out what went awry and if it is infact plausible based on the evidence that our lhbs really screwed the pooch.
Thank you!