You sold me. My only concern is I wont reach my outlet in the counter. One way to find out I guess.
Glad I could help.
You sold me. My only concern is I wont reach my outlet in the counter. One way to find out I guess.
You sold me. My only concern is I wont reach my outlet in the counter. One way to find out I guess.
Glad I could help.Tape measure. If not, you can either try to find a 12 gauge extension cord wire (why even at 15' they rate it for 15A is beyond me) or build one for the length you need. I assume your kitchen has a 20A outlet? Find out what else is on it, for me the microwave is on it so I don't let that run while brewing.
Seabrew, agree on the chiller too. I'm interested in hearing how the high gravity brew goes (how many # of grain? to get to 1.090 for your recipe?). I'm not sure I'd want to "water" it down, but will be interested in what you think. I look forward to hearing your results. I am brewing this weekend, for my brother, and one of my next 3 brews I'm thinking of will be a barley wine. I was thinking in the 4g range if I needed to keep grain bill size down, though maybe 18-18.5# should be fine for 5, I haven't looked into it yet.
I had one of my Golden Promise Mosaic smash I made after one week in the bottle. One fine beer, and surprising given its age. Looking forward to it this weekend, as well as when my Black Out Vanilla Stout is done (will age on bourbon soaked vanilla beans, a first for me)![]()
My Baltic Porter I made had 17 lbs of grains with a 90 minute boil and I was around an inch below the holes for the handle. I think the SG was 1.087 at 5.25 gallons.
...Apparently, diluting and/or blending is pretty popular in commerical breweries.
My Baltic Porter I made had 17 lbs of grains with a 90 minute boil and I was around an inch below the holes for the handle. I think the SG was 1.087 at 5.25 gallons.
The "suggested" max is 20lbs. Do you think you could of gotten another 3lbs in the grain basket?
Is that Canadian pounds?!I thought it was closer to 18.
The max is actually 9kg - just looked it up.Which is 19.84lbs
If I went with a 60 minute boil I think it would fit. With a barley wine wouldn't you want to substitute some Turbinado sugar to raise the OG?
Someone suggested it to me earlier in the thread, but if younwanna do a high gravity beer, you can cut your grain bill by about 5 pounds and add a 3 lb bag of DME. excellent solution to the 20 lb grain limitation
I looked at a couple other options other than the grainfather.... and ended up coming back here. Placed my order last night. Should be here by Thursday!
Congrats, I'm still waiting on approval from the boss to order. Evidently I have too many hobbies and need to clear some out.
I looked at a couple other options other than the grainfather.... and ended up coming back here. Placed my order last night. Should be here by Thursday!
I finally got me grains!
I'm doing my first small batch and i noticed the overflow pipe which is a fixed length will not go down to the top perforated plate. I was just going to mash it without starting the pump because i was afriad i would of gotten a stuck "sparge". However, i decided to pump the wort very slow so it doesn't build up to high on top the grain bed. Problem solved!
Shipped! woohoo.
Quick question on mashing in with an electric system.. This is the only thing I'm concerned about. For example, if I want to mash at 152, would I set my controller to 152 and add the grain and just let it heat back up? or would I still set it at 165 ish and then add my grain, and then take the controller down to 152?
^^ Yup! Yes, 20a has the T shape, but check your breakers. Then you also know what else is on that circuit and can avoid using if a big draw (ex, a microwave).
With 1600w of power you are up against the 15a limit on the circuit. 20a clears that easily. Unless your kitchen is old or poorly wired for today's usage, you ought to have a 20a circuit in kitchen. Hopefully with a GFCI outlet!
Pretty easy to assemble I guess. A couple of the directions threw me off. Had a hard time getting the bottom plate into the grain basket, and I still don't have it in perfectly. Love it so far!
Pretty easy to assemble I guess. A couple of the directions threw me off. Had a hard time getting the bottom plate into the grain basket, and I still don't have it in perfectly. Love it so far!
IME don't even look at the temp readout when your using the chiller. I think it must be the pump that drives the temp up. Anyhow, i just put a floating thermometer in my bucket while i pumped the wort today. And just feel the outlet hose going to the bucket to get an idea if its cool.
One thing about the GF its not fool-proof.
The last FYIGet used to busting apart the ball valve and cleaning the spring, ball and housing - its a one-way/check valve. You just need 2 adjustable wrenchs. If you don't your pump will stall.