Shawn3997
Will brew for beer.
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2016
- Messages
- 127
- Reaction score
- 30
So...
I did my first all-grain batch yesterday (yay!) and it was a day-long event that ended up a real mess (sigh!).
To start the day off, I poured 7.5 gallons of 160F distilled water into my cooler that had a voile bag and 11 lbs. of grain in it. Stirred it up well, hit my 153F number perfectly. Put the top on and waited an hour. Opened it up, temperature was 150F. More of a drop than I thought it should have been given that it was 83F ambient but oh well.
Excited at how easy this was, I measured my wort. My post-mash gravity was 1.022. I thought that was *WAY* too low, so after freaking out a bit, I heated the wort back up to 160F and did the whole mash again. After another hour, I ended up at like 1.032 or so.
To me that looked like it was still too low given that I wanted to end up at 1.052, but I didn't have any reference, so I went with it. I started my boil with just under 7 gallons of wort. I had only lost a tad more than 1/2 of a gallon to the grain. (Guess I squeezed it all out!)
--> Mental note: Don't try to save money by not having spigots installed in either your cooler or kettle. I spilled half a gallon of HOT wort all over everything trying to move it around without the spigots that I *will* buy before my next batch. I didn't burn myself, but only by sheer luck. <--
Then, to get the final gravity down, I went with a somewhat vigorous boil for an hour and ended up at a little BELOW 5 gallons, and a final S.G. of 1.058! I had boiled off almost 2 gallons in a hour. (Yay banjo burner!)
Also yay! to my new 50' stainless steel immersion cooler. It did a fantastic job getting the wort down from boiling to 100F in 10-15 minutes or so. Then it took about 15 minutes to get it from 100F to 80F, where it seemed to stall out. Our ground water is probably about 80F this time of year I surmise.
I poured everything into the carboy and noticed it had a ton of gunk in it. It looks like my hop bag let half my hops out with the vigorous boil. (I guess I'll learn how to use finings now, so that's a plus, right? What should I use?)
I threw some dry yeast in at 78F and put the carboy in my fermentation cooler thingy with some 2 liter bottles of frozen water. It's perking today, so I guess that's a plus, but it was a hell of a day. Only took like 6 hours after all the cleaning was done...
Before killing myself again can someone tell me if 1.032 is a good post-mash gravity number? Or should I have had a higher number and done a less intense boil? Why did I get only 1.022 after the first mash? I did notice that my grains were poorly crushed, should I blender the next batch?
And did my use of distilled water cause an issue? Those are the only two things I can think of that might have led to such a poor first mash.
I'm too tired to ask more questions... hah. What a day!
I did my first all-grain batch yesterday (yay!) and it was a day-long event that ended up a real mess (sigh!).
To start the day off, I poured 7.5 gallons of 160F distilled water into my cooler that had a voile bag and 11 lbs. of grain in it. Stirred it up well, hit my 153F number perfectly. Put the top on and waited an hour. Opened it up, temperature was 150F. More of a drop than I thought it should have been given that it was 83F ambient but oh well.
Excited at how easy this was, I measured my wort. My post-mash gravity was 1.022. I thought that was *WAY* too low, so after freaking out a bit, I heated the wort back up to 160F and did the whole mash again. After another hour, I ended up at like 1.032 or so.
To me that looked like it was still too low given that I wanted to end up at 1.052, but I didn't have any reference, so I went with it. I started my boil with just under 7 gallons of wort. I had only lost a tad more than 1/2 of a gallon to the grain. (Guess I squeezed it all out!)
--> Mental note: Don't try to save money by not having spigots installed in either your cooler or kettle. I spilled half a gallon of HOT wort all over everything trying to move it around without the spigots that I *will* buy before my next batch. I didn't burn myself, but only by sheer luck. <--
Then, to get the final gravity down, I went with a somewhat vigorous boil for an hour and ended up at a little BELOW 5 gallons, and a final S.G. of 1.058! I had boiled off almost 2 gallons in a hour. (Yay banjo burner!)
Also yay! to my new 50' stainless steel immersion cooler. It did a fantastic job getting the wort down from boiling to 100F in 10-15 minutes or so. Then it took about 15 minutes to get it from 100F to 80F, where it seemed to stall out. Our ground water is probably about 80F this time of year I surmise.
I poured everything into the carboy and noticed it had a ton of gunk in it. It looks like my hop bag let half my hops out with the vigorous boil. (I guess I'll learn how to use finings now, so that's a plus, right? What should I use?)
I threw some dry yeast in at 78F and put the carboy in my fermentation cooler thingy with some 2 liter bottles of frozen water. It's perking today, so I guess that's a plus, but it was a hell of a day. Only took like 6 hours after all the cleaning was done...
Before killing myself again can someone tell me if 1.032 is a good post-mash gravity number? Or should I have had a higher number and done a less intense boil? Why did I get only 1.022 after the first mash? I did notice that my grains were poorly crushed, should I blender the next batch?
And did my use of distilled water cause an issue? Those are the only two things I can think of that might have led to such a poor first mash.
I'm too tired to ask more questions... hah. What a day!