- Joined
- Jan 17, 2014
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- 571
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Gonna try not to TL;DR this one. But here's the quick ones in case you don't read it all:
Recommendations to hoist the bag with pulley that avoid having to make additional knot in drawstring.
Analog kettle or handheld digital thermometer?
It's been 3 weeks since the brew day. I usually take good notes of procedure, successes, failures but this was such a comedy of errors that I don't really want to make a record of it. Here's a summary of the bad:
Started too late in the day, around 3:30PM. Had me feeling rushed through the whole process.
Set up the burner outside on patio. Didn't realize till time to transfer wort to FV that I was set up on a slight angle. Lot of wort was left in kettle and ball valve was reduced to no output.
I was planning to use this ladder trick...
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/right-biab-extract.html
But the kettle sitting on the elevated burner did not allow that to happen. I had to have an assistant help me lift the kettle off and set on the ground in order to use the ladder. Even then, I had to tie a knot close to the bag opening in order give the pulley enough slack to pull up and allow the bag to drain. I WOULD REALLY APPRECIATE if anyone has advice for how to use the bag/pulley combination to get a good lift going. Thank you.
Temperature control. I just couldn't get this right. The kettle analog thermometer is "slower" than my handheld digital thermometer. And the readings didn't match each other. I don't know if that was a result of bad calibration or...It seems obvious that I should just use the digital however, I'd love some feedback on this. Trust digital or analog? This has me losing confidence for future brews and my ability to maintain a proper mash temp.
The rest of the problems were just nuisances, I suppose. It was a different animal to brew outside and with full volume. Really threw me off. Through much of the process, I wasn't a happy camper and, by the end of it, I was so frustrated that I thought I'd quit brewing. Have talked myself off the ledge; samples I've pulled look, smell, and taste great. Beer should be ready in 2 1/2 weeks so we'll see how it turned out!
Thank you for reading!
Recommendations to hoist the bag with pulley that avoid having to make additional knot in drawstring.
Analog kettle or handheld digital thermometer?
It's been 3 weeks since the brew day. I usually take good notes of procedure, successes, failures but this was such a comedy of errors that I don't really want to make a record of it. Here's a summary of the bad:
Started too late in the day, around 3:30PM. Had me feeling rushed through the whole process.
Set up the burner outside on patio. Didn't realize till time to transfer wort to FV that I was set up on a slight angle. Lot of wort was left in kettle and ball valve was reduced to no output.
I was planning to use this ladder trick...
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/right-biab-extract.html
But the kettle sitting on the elevated burner did not allow that to happen. I had to have an assistant help me lift the kettle off and set on the ground in order to use the ladder. Even then, I had to tie a knot close to the bag opening in order give the pulley enough slack to pull up and allow the bag to drain. I WOULD REALLY APPRECIATE if anyone has advice for how to use the bag/pulley combination to get a good lift going. Thank you.
Temperature control. I just couldn't get this right. The kettle analog thermometer is "slower" than my handheld digital thermometer. And the readings didn't match each other. I don't know if that was a result of bad calibration or...It seems obvious that I should just use the digital however, I'd love some feedback on this. Trust digital or analog? This has me losing confidence for future brews and my ability to maintain a proper mash temp.
The rest of the problems were just nuisances, I suppose. It was a different animal to brew outside and with full volume. Really threw me off. Through much of the process, I wasn't a happy camper and, by the end of it, I was so frustrated that I thought I'd quit brewing. Have talked myself off the ledge; samples I've pulled look, smell, and taste great. Beer should be ready in 2 1/2 weeks so we'll see how it turned out!
Thank you for reading!