OK, so I know I am not the sharpest tool in the shed, but the Helles I have working now was supposed to have a preboil gravity of 1.045 and I clocked in at 1.051. According to Grainfather that is a 91% efficiency? Does that sound about right?
I have the same "problem" with my AOI. Totally possible. I e had to adjust my recipes to make up for the high efficiency. Just make sure you're not increasing sg with unfermentables, otherwise it's a good problem to have.OK, so I know I am not the sharpest tool in the shed, but the Helles I have working now was supposed to have a preboil gravity of 1.045 and I clocked in at 1.051. According to Grainfather that is a 91% efficiency? Does that sound about right?
Make sure that the wort is well stirred before you take your sample as it can stratify significantly as soon as the vigorous boil stops. I had a post boil sample that was 6 points high yesterday when I grabbed it from the unstirred top of the wort. When I did another well stirred sample it was dead on. Also make sure that you're cooling the sample to the calibrated temperature of your measurement device.OK, so I know I am not the sharpest tool in the shed, but the Helles I have working now was supposed to have a preboil gravity of 1.045 and I clocked in at 1.051. According to Grainfather that is a 91% efficiency? Does that sound about right?
Yes. I think this is an issue with the grain absorption calcs in brewfather. I consistently have to add more sparge water than predicted, but I still get higher numbers than calculated. Even at full volume, I get 90-93% mash efficiency. Only way to deal with it is lower grain bill.Pre-boil gravity doesn't mean much without pre-boil volume. Maybe you really did get 10-12% more sugar out of the grains than expected, or maybe you got 10-12% less wort out of the mash than expected. Or maybe 5% of each.
No worries man. This is a good problem. So many recipes are written for 3V systems and AIO blows those numbers out of the water. It's easy to deal with. We just have to make sure we don't extract more unfermentables and adjust our IBUs. Good efficiency is a good thing.Thanks all. I was kinda fired up but now not so much. LOL.
I have the opposite issue. I used to have to under sparge by about 1/2 a gallon or I would never make numbers and would end up with a bit more than would fit in a 5-gal corny. Is yours a 120v or 240v unit? Since I bought a mill, I have consistently beaten the predicted OG numbers by 3 or 4 points using the GF water volumes. And then I bottle a couple before transferring the rest to keg.Yes. I think this is an issue with the grain absorption calcs in brewfather. I consistently have to add more sparge water than predicted, but I still get higher numbers than calculated. Even at full volume, I get 90-93% mash efficiency. Only way to deal with it is lower grain bill.
It just goes to show that although these apps and AIO systems make a lot of things easier, we still have to refine a process that fits our brewery specifically.I have the opposite issue. I used to have to under sparge by about 1/2 a gallon or I would never make numbers and would end up with a bit more than would fit in a 5-gal corny. Is yours a 120v or 240v unit? Since I bought a mill, I have consistently beaten the predicted OG numbers by 3 or 4 points using the GF water volumes. And then I bottle a couple before transferring the rest to keg.
Did you set these values or are they the GF defaults? I've never tweaked any of their numbers other than the Alpha Acid ratings for hops when I was trying to stay around 32 IBUs on a bitter. Their numbers are usually low compared to what's on the packets.Mine is the 120V and I do crush my own. My numbers are good but it seems I am a bit under the volume that goes into the fermenter so I must have under estimated the losses either in the boil or the grain absorption.
I have found using the GF app water calculations to be spot onMine is the 120V and I do crush my own. My numbers are good but it seems I am a bit under the volume that goes into the fermenter so I must have under estimated the losses either in the boil or the grain absorption.
Not sure if this thread is about Grainfather (app) or Brewfather, or if they're the same?I did my first grain brew just yesterday on my brand new Brewzilla 35. Brewfather, when I selected brewzilla as the equipment profile, set the efficiency to 78%, and expected me to get 24L of post-boil wort @ 1.046. I actually got 23L @ 1.054. In order for brewfather to show 1.054 SG, I have to manually edit the efficiency to 93%.
I think it's because I sparged - there's no inbuilt sparge ability of the brewzilla, so presumably the equipment profile doesn't take that into account, but I manually sparged by simply lifting the basket up to the top and manually pouring heated sparge water over it.
Not sure if this thread is about Grainfather (app) or Brewfather, or if they're the same?
I've had the BZ g4 for 30 brews, and use Brewfather app.
Not sure where Brewfather gets the efficiency figure from. BZ efficiency is lightly to vary, depending on various factors, especially the grain bill. It would be very low, if you attempted say, a 15% imperial stout.
Main issue I have with brewfather, is that it usually gives water figures for a mash, much thicker than I like.
I prefer the mash fairly thin, with a small sparge. So mash water / kg grain varies with grain bill.
But brewfather only has a setting for litres/per kg malt.
My experience is similar. For a 5 gal batch with 10 - 12 lbs of grain it's usually near 4 gal mash and 3 gal sparge. Makes a thick mash. I used to under cut their sparge numbers by about a quart or so to prop up my OG and reduce post boil volume a bit. Stopped doing that since I started milling my own just before mash and the numbers are usually spot on, even tho I usually get about 5.5 gals of wort using a hop spider to reduce the sludge. A bit less if I go commando.Since you mention the mash thickness, I will say the Grainfather app uses a very thick mash consistency. Then, seems to add quite a bit of sparge water. On the couple of things I have done so far with the unit, the mash and sparge water amounts were darn near the same. I should probably check it against Brewfather to see if they are different
Mine is the 120V and I do crush my own. My numbers are good but it seems I am a bit under the volume that goes into the fermenter so I must have under estimated the losses either in the boil or the grain absorption.