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Dumbest Newbie Brewing Mistakes You've Made

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BuglessDuster

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I've been brewing for a lot of years (almost 20), but I only typically brew one or two batches a year.

On the second batch of beer I ever made (nut brown ale) I pitched the yeast before the temperature had cooled sufficiently and I killed the yeast. I didn't know that I could just re-pitch the yeast, so I dumped out a full five gallons of wort. What are your dumb brewing mistakes?
 
I brewed an entire AG batch of SNPA clone using un-crushed grain. The online HBS screwed up and forgot to crush it. I was too dumb to know the difference. It was my first AG. I had a very low OG. I ended up dumping a few lbs of DME into it. It was drinkable, but you couldn't get drunk on it.
 
Back when I was extract brewing, I was including two row and other grains that should be mashed in with my steeping grains.
 
I used to bottle and would leave cases of unrinsed empties sitting around which depending on the time of year would fill full of fruit flies. First mistake. I bottled three batches of beer and in the heat of things bottled a whole batch of gingerbeer without washing the bottles.

To make things worse I somehow didn't realize that's what I had done and gave few bottles to my GF and her friends to take to the beach.

I've made quite a few minor mistakes over the years. A few I can remember are forgetting to attach my copper manifold in my mash tun before adding grains to strike water.... Did that twice and had to burn my arm to get it in.

Side note on that one is that if anyone else does that And has the manifold suggested in How-To-Brew I realized after that a piece of 3/8 silicone tubing fits over the end of my manifold so I could have just lowered the manifold in and pushed it down with my brew paddle and then created a siphon to complete the lauter.

A huge and potentially deadly error that I made when I first started AG back in 2010 was building a nice propane fired and gravity fed three tiered system in my unventilated tiny room in my basement.

Did one brew and had to move it all outside and dismantle everything I had built.
 
Wish I could say it was something I did as a Newbie..... but, it wasn't. About 3 years ago forgot to turn the burner off on my mash tun when I added the grain. Checked the temp about 20 minutes later and it was boiling...... Dumped it and started my brew day over. That is probably the out and out "dumbest" mistake I have made. Definitely a bonehead move on my part.
 
No major mishaps here, but one one batch I forgot to close the valve on my bottling bucket. Started racking out of primary, and took more than a few seconds to figure out what was running onto the floor.
 
Fermented a beer in a garage during summertime where temps got to about 100-120 because I didn't know any better.
 
Lived in an apartment and kept a fermenting beer in my bedroom, woke up suffocating and had a headache for 3-4 days. I could have died that night.
 
Fermented a beer in a garage during summertime where temps got to about 100-120 because I didn't know any better.
I did something similar. I put my carboy in the stairwell in full sunlight, thinking the heat would speed the whole process up.
 
For me it was my first time experimenting with yeast starters.
I got 2 liters of dme boiled and cooled, then I pitched 1 packet of Safale US-04.
The next day I decanted, and poured the yeast onto a 1 gallon batch of beer. Yup!
Literally within minutes the yeast started to go crazy and about 2 hours later massive flow off was coming out. Next day I had lost half the gallon and cleaned up the mess. I bottled it and tastes it.
Bubble gum juice I would call it and very very rough alcohol.
Yup.
Lol
 
When I bottled my first batch of beer, I used all 5 ounces of the priming sugar that came with the kit. Didn't know a thing about carbonation levels, just figured that if they sent me 5 ounces, then that's probably what I needed. Needless to say, the beer was definitely carbonated.
 
I think I posted in a similar thread, but I went at least three years without sanitizing a thing, even in between batches. I was under the impression that One-Step was a sanitizer (new flash, it's not).
 
Dechlorinated with boiling instead of campden tablets for reasons I cannot now recall (probably of the "oh, ALACK AND ALAS MY TOP HAT HAS FALLEN, I should order some of those!" on brewday flavor) for more than a year, which works because my water supply uses chlorine not chloramine, but adds a minimum of two hours to brewdays.

Finally ordered some. >.>
 
Pretty sure I haven't my biggest mistake yet, I do mistakes good!

But you can not rack 6 gallons into a 5 gallon carboy, you can however make big mess real quick.

New brewing rule at my house....Don't walk away during a boil or a racking.
 
Wish I could say it was something I did as a Newbie..... but, it wasn't. About 3 years ago forgot to turn the burner off on my mash tun when I added the grain. Checked the temp about 20 minutes later and it was boiling...... Dumped it and started my brew day over. That is probably the out and out "dumbest" mistake I have made. Definitely a bonehead move on my part.


I just did the same thing brewing a saison last weekend, mashed in and hit strike temp right on, thought I turned the burner off and went inside for the mash. It was 195 when I came back out and decide to just roll with it, only missed og by 4 points and today it is 1 004 (3711 is amazing) so guess it wasn't so bad. That is probably my most newb mistake, and it happened 6 years in
 
I have been brewing for over 10 years now so I would not say this mistake is a Newbie mistake as it just happened last year. Use your hose clamps when transferring hot water to mash tun! I decided not to because I did not feel like digging it out, during transfer the tubing popped off and 168F water landed directly on top of my foot (second mistake not wearing shoes), left a pretty good burn......still have the scar!
 
I have been brewing for over 10 years now so I would not say this mistake is a Newbie mistake as it just happened last year. Use your hose clamps when transferring hot water to mash tun! I decided not to because I did not feel like digging it out, during transfer the tubing popped off and 168F water landed directly on top of my foot (second mistake not wearing shoes), left a pretty good burn......still have the scar!

I will consider this every brew day, but you can't make me wear shoes unless I'm on the clock. Hose clamps: yes. Shoes: your cut off.
 
I have been brewing for over 10 years now so I would not say this mistake is a Newbie mistake as it just happened last year. Use your hose clamps when transferring hot water to mash tun! I decided not to because I did not feel like digging it out, during transfer the tubing popped off and 168F water landed directly on top of my foot (second mistake not wearing shoes), left a pretty good burn......still have the scar!


Posted in the the don't do that thread but pertinent here...

Was switching hoses to whirlpool and pulled the hose off an open boil kettle valve. Shot boiling wort on my junk. Got my sandled feet too so our stories are similar, but junk beats feet. Thankfully I was wearing basketball shorts so I could pull them away. Lol
 
On my first brew I followed the Mr.Beer kit instructions to the letter. Only beer I ever dumped. Then I bought "How to Brew" and never looked back.
 
When I do 10 gallon batches and split into 2- fermentor. I need a fugking neon sign to remind me which one I just put the yeast into..... I have double pitched my yeast twice and both times had to make a quick dash to the local breweries....

That's not too bad, yet.
 
not a huge deal, and wish I could say this was a newbie mistake, but it was last weekend...

Was teaching my neighbor how to brew. She wanted to do an extract batch. It's been a few years since I did an extract batch which included the step where you steep some grains before starting the boil. (done a couple quick 30 min boils with extract and no steeping grains in the past year or so, but mostly I'm doing all-grain). Anyways, we were about 20 min into the boil before I realized we forgot to pull the steeping grains. ******* move on my part and felt stupid since I was supposed to be "teaching" someone.
 
Just custom ordered some difficult to find grains and was excited to brew. During mash, noticed the kettle was unusually warm for 153F. Turns out temp probe fell out of thermowell...mash temp was more like 190...doh
 
Lived in an apartment and kept a fermenting beer in my bedroom, woke up suffocating and had a headache for 3-4 days. I could have died that night.

Is your bedroom an airtight broom closet? This alone should not have caused any issue. It might have smelled sulphury, and the "bloop-bloop-bloop" of the airlock would keep me awake, but it definitely should not have produced enough CO2, rapidly enough, to actually affect your respiration.
 
Brewing mistakes? I've made a couple of doozies.

1.) 15 years ago, before I knew anything about homebrewing, my wife got into making her own wine, from the juice kits where you get the bag of concentrated juice, you pour it in the bucket, top up with water, pitch yeast, yada yada yada. One day I was with her at the LHBS while she was picking up a couple of wine kits, and I wandered into the "Beer" section. I found a couple cans of Coopers or Muntons or whatever, and decided to give it a try. I boiled it up, poured it into a bucket, topped up with water, pitched the yeast, and then attached the heating belt. Why? Because that's what my wife did with her wine, so I figured that's just what you do when you're fermenting stuff. I wrapped the heating belt around the bucket and plugged it in. Not to a temperature controller. To the wall. For 2 weeks. Banana flavoured nail polish remover. Needless to say, I quit homebrewing for 10 years.

2.) Second-biggest mistake, I'd have to say was the time I brewed a Rauchbier. I ferment in glass carboys, and knowing how dangerous they are, I'm very careful with them. I brew in my garage, which has a rough concrete floor. I knew enough about glass carboys to know that setting them directly on a hard, rough surface like unfinished concrete will cause pressure points that can cause the carboy to crack and break, so I always make sure I set my carboys on something softer, like some scrap lumber or a milk crate. On this day, I grabbed an empty cardboard box from the recycling bin. Picture a desktop computer, on its side, that was roughly the shape and proportions of the box. I set the carboy on top and began racking the chilled wort into it.

I turned my back to clean something and heard a loud "CRASH", and my garage floor was covered with sweet, sticky wort. The box was plenty rigid enough to hold an empty carboy, but as the carboy filled, it got heavier, and sank into the box. Unevenly, as it turned out, causing it to tip over and shatter on my garage floor.

Thankfully, I didn't get hurt, but it drove home the dangers of carboys to me, as the resulting carnage was a deadly mix of big chunks and tiny shards of glass, all razor-sharp. I had to carefully sweep up the glass debris, then pressure wash away the wort lest it attract ants. It was heartbreaking, but I learned a valuable lesson.

Those would probably be my two "greatest hits." Minor ones are more common, like leaving the blowoff tube in the bucket of sanitizer while cold-crashing my beer (hello 1-inch layer of StarSan atop my Octoberfest), forgetting to dump the remaining sanitizer from a carboy before racking wort into it (just a couple of ounces, didn't make a difference), believing that dry yeast requires no aeration whatsoever (at the time, I was siphoning my wort from my kettle to my carboys, which resulted in no froth at all during transfer), and resulting in more banana beer. Also, making a 1-gallon starter for a lager and attempting to pitch it without decanting, forgetting that I should have left room for it in the carboy (5 gallons of beer + frothy foam up to the mouth of the carboy + 1 gallon of starter does not fit in a 6 gallon carboy).
 
Brewing for 4 years. Two months ago I used my bottling bucket as a primary. Everything was fine till I went to dry hop. Some time during fermentation, The valve broke in two, ( I don't know how) and emptied on to the carpet. I was left with an empty bucket and a carpet full of beer to clean up. It did give me the motivation to redo the room. I may have over tightened the valve?
 
but junk beats feet

On some websites it's the reverse :D

So, on a vaguely related note, it turns out that the 5 gallon Alhambra-style water bottles I picked up to store pre-boiled water for later use, to try and knock that two hours back off my brewday, actually SHRINK if you pour water into them that's been cooling down from boiling for only 30 minutes or so. (So 180F+). One of the bottles is now slightly but noticeably smaller in diameter than the other, and after filling it up to an inch from the top I had at least a good PINT overflow onto the floor after I took the cap off next. Also had a vaguely "hot electric element" smell. >.>

(I dumped that water, needless to say.)

Just custom ordered some difficult to find grains and was excited to brew. During mash, noticed the kettle was unusually warm for 153F. Turns out temp probe fell out of thermowell...mash temp was more like 190...doh

What grains?
 
Not realizing the wort chiller hose thats carrying the hot water out had sneaked its way out of the sink :confused:
Talk about getting wet please, it was out for about 3 or 4 minutes please.
 
Oh, and public service announcement: loose rice hulls have a specific mass of about a pound and a half to the gallon. Buying 5 pounds of them at a time is thus...kind of inconvenient. Buying 10 pounds total because, when you realize that your LHBS carries them after all even though there's no entry on their web inventory for them, you didn't remember if you remembered to order them along with your Golden Promise, Midnight Wheat, and so on is more so. (Though to be fair, this - along with my "uh, actually we don't carry Palisades anymore, so wanna pick out some hops to replace that in your order?" issue, wouldn't even have come up if they kept their damn site up to date. Though, the latter snagged me an ounce each of Mosaic and Galaxy at about a 40% discount. I think "not updating your web store site when what you keep in inventory changes" is kind of a classic "newbie mistake" at the commercial level...).
 
I did an extract IPA a few years back. It called for dry hopping. I thought I'd try making a hop tea to add to the keg in lieu of dry hopping. I used a French press coffee maker and literally pressed the hell out of my hops. The tea smelled awesome. The beer tasted like I'd dumped a few pounds of freshly cut grass into it. It was undrinkable - but I drank it anyway. :D
 
airtight no, but a broom closet yes, I had a 6 by 8 bedroom, barely fit a twin matress in it and still have enough room to open the door with a dresser in it. it was winter and about 60 degrees in the house. I wanted my 10 gallons of hefe to be warm enough to produce stronger esters so I put it in my room in 2 5 gal carboys. It was enough to make me feel like I was suffocating especially not having a bed spring or frame I was on the ground in it. poor brewer issues.
 
airtight no, but a broom closet yes, I had a 6 by 8 bedroom, barely fit a twin matress in it and still have enough room to open the door with a dresser in it. it was winter and about 60 degrees in the house. I wanted my 10 gallons of hefe to be warm enough to produce stronger esters so I put it in my room in 2 5 gal carboys. It was enough to make me feel like I was suffocating especially not having a bed spring or frame I was on the ground in it. poor brewer issues.

That'll do it, especially if you're not using central heat for the room...
 
Trying desperately to aerate my fermented beer in order to restart fermentation. Repitched yeast. Raised the temp. Was measuring the fermented beer with a refractometer.
 
I think I posted in a similar thread, but I went at least three years without sanitizing a thing, even in between batches. I was under the impression that One-Step was a sanitizer (new flash, it's not).

I bought my first equipment kit from NB, and all they had in it was One-Step. I thought as well that it was a one step cleaner/sanitizer. It was probably only because it was the first brew, and there wasn't much if any gunk on brand-new brewing apparatus that I didn't throw that batch out.

Only after that first one did I learn it wasn't a sanitizer. Fortunately, that first beer turned out fairly ok.

I've made a bunch of little mistakes (who knew sprinkling bottled water over a drained grain bed doesn't really count as sparging? :) ), but none have been huge. Just little stuff like leaving the ball valve open, forgetting to include a water amendment, things like that.
 
1. "I can finish this outdoor brew day before that hurricane hits."
2. Hose clamp on wort chiller not tightened and nasty hose water starts pouring into my wort.
3. Thinking I had memorized the brewing process after two batches and end up boiling my steeping grains. Oh yeah, and letting the muslin bag just sink to the bottom of the kettle and smelt during that process. Mmmm, tannins.
 
I bought my first equipment kit from NB, and all they had in it was One-Step. .

Apparently believing product labels is a pretty common "mistake."

For some reason i thought it was a combination cleaner and sanitizer. I just checked the kit they're currently selling and it is noted that they include a cleaner, but no sanitizer.

They've also changed some of the verbiage; at one point it was "all you need is bottles." They no longer say that.

Seems to me they should include a small bottle of Star-San.
 

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