GorillaMedic
Member
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2016
- Messages
- 9
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- 14
First time brewing, with another guy who's done it a few times before a couple years ago. We brewed a pretty simple single malt/single hop IPA recipe with an all-grain method. Our mash efficiency was terrible (54% calculated), in part due to not having our strike temperature high enough and then struggling to raise the temperature by adding hot water. We initially mashed in with 8 gallons and had a mash temp of 135º for about 30 minutes, then increased it to 153º by adding more hot water; about 13 minutes later, increased it to 162º and held for 10 minutes. Used a large rectangular cooler as our Mash tun.
Vorloft, then batch sparged, and then boil. Boiled for 90 minutes, hopped per recipe.
Ran into issues chilling using a Therminator plate chiller which clogged twice, I guess with hop material? Also didn't have enough ice. We ended up getting our ~10 gallon batch down to about 90º, then transferred to my chest freezer fermentation chamber, and waited to pitch yeast until it cooled to 68º (about 45 hrs later).
SG at this point was 1.052 (measured with refractometer)
Fermentation didn't start until 1215 hrs, which had me worried. It did blow off one airlock and almost blew the second one.
After seven days, fermentation activity appeared to have stopped and a hydrometer reading was 1.014. Transferred to secondary using a siphon and dry hopped.
Since then, it's developed some foam on top, but has minimal activity in the airlock. Looking forward to bottling in a couple weeks and tasting it in a month or so.
A few things we learned:
Any other observations/thoughts/ideas for how we can improve our beer?
I'll update when we can actually taste the finished product. A taste of the beer when it finished primary was pretty promising; no off flavors and overall pretty good.
Vorloft, then batch sparged, and then boil. Boiled for 90 minutes, hopped per recipe.
Ran into issues chilling using a Therminator plate chiller which clogged twice, I guess with hop material? Also didn't have enough ice. We ended up getting our ~10 gallon batch down to about 90º, then transferred to my chest freezer fermentation chamber, and waited to pitch yeast until it cooled to 68º (about 45 hrs later).
SG at this point was 1.052 (measured with refractometer)
Fermentation didn't start until 1215 hrs, which had me worried. It did blow off one airlock and almost blew the second one.
After seven days, fermentation activity appeared to have stopped and a hydrometer reading was 1.014. Transferred to secondary using a siphon and dry hopped.
Since then, it's developed some foam on top, but has minimal activity in the airlock. Looking forward to bottling in a couple weeks and tasting it in a month or so.
A few things we learned:
- We need to preheat the mash tun, and use higher strike temperatures to hit our target mash temp.
- Maybe I'm being paranoid, but I felt like we could be more thorough in sanitization.
- Definitely need a filter before running wort into plate chiller. And need more hoses in general.
- We didn't aerate the wort much at all; going to try oxygenation next time.
- A blow-off hose would've saved me a lot of cleanup time.
- Our mash tun valve/bazooka screen fitting/lack of sparge setup made things unnecessarily complicated. We're building a new mash tun.
Any other observations/thoughts/ideas for how we can improve our beer?
I'll update when we can actually taste the finished product. A taste of the beer when it finished primary was pretty promising; no off flavors and overall pretty good.