• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

grain freshness ? help?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

WheaYat

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
74
Reaction score
1
Location
New Orleans
ok so i have alot of grain that is about 9 months old. i ordered it milled but i kept it in zip locs and then in a metal tin and it has been kept in the back fridge. do u cats think that it still fresh? i had read previously somewhere that u dont want to mill your grain until your ready to brew, for freshness purposes. so my question is, would u brew with 9-10 month old milled grain that has been somewhat air tight and in the fridge?


if not i will be making another order, obviously. an so this dosent happen to me again, is there any way to mill the grain myself without a machine? rolling pin maybe?

thanks alot and GOD BLESS
 
Use it. Looks like you took as good care of it as you could. Use it as quickly as you can.

People use flour for baking that's a year old; it's best fresh, but still usable if it's old.

Get a mill. Any other way is a pain. Check out Corona Mills. I use one, works great, and a lot cheaper than the barley crushers.
 
ok if u think so I'll use it. I tried it and it tasted good. well didn't tasted stale. it's victory, carapils, honey, and crystal 60L. God Bless.
 
+1 on getting the grain mill. They are pretty cheap ($50 at my LHBS), and you'll be so glad that you did it. Attach a screw-gun to the crank and you can chew through 10lb of grain in a matter of minutes... not to mention the fact that you can CONTROL how fine you crush the grain. I am never happy with the "pre-crushed" stuff that i've ordred through Morebeer.com. It's like they don't want you to get good efficiency so you have to order more grain. lame..
 
yeah that's who I order from and see that
alot of the grains aren't milled as fine as they should. so it seems. usually pretty spot on as far as efficency goes though. but I always break em down a tad more wit a rolling pin real quick.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top