Chadwell
Active Member
Hey, its me! Chadwell! Up here on this ledge! So, today was the day...I bought brewing equipment soon after Christmas after over a year of procrastination. It came with an Amber Ale kit. Since the day the kit arrived, it has sat in my house unused while I read How to Brew by Palmer and poured over post after post on this forum. I figured I was as ready as I'd ever be and went for it today. While I still got enjoyment out of it, I can't say it went all that smoothly! So, here I am, prepared to be hit with some "relax, it will be ok" posts...hopefully anyway; which should set me at ease. Here were my ingredients:
Two 3.3 lb. LME (Amber) cans
1 lb. crushed crystal grain
1.5 oz hop pellets (Fuggles)
2 packets Munton's dry yeast
Here were my steps -
2 gal. spring water with grain bag (1 lb crystal) brought to boil, removed from heat, steeped for 5 additional minutes. Removed grains, added 2 cans of LME and 1.5 oz Fuggles (into my now clean nylon grain bag), brought back up to boil. At this point things were going well but my boil took FOREVER. Damn electric stove is killing me. I never felt like it was a great boil either...I was afraid of scorch though so I would stir here and there. I then reduced heat to medium and boiled gently for 30 minutes.
While this was happening, I took previously boiled water (cooling) and measured 1.5 cups of it, took the temp, and mixed in my yeast packets (then covering with plastic wrap). Problem is, I noticed after the yeast was added that the temp in my glass was uneven and actually 111 F instead of my target of 95-105 F. Hope my yeast didn't die?
So, I then cooled my wort in my ice bath (40 lbs of ice in my bathtub). Took 20 minutes when I was shooting for 10-15 and this was WITH my adding 1 gallon of spring water to try and cool it. Is it ok to add water during the cool down? Maybe that was a mistake but I was flustered that it was taking too long. I got the wort down to 71 F when I pitched the yeast (yeast was at 77 F). Took a hydrometer reading at this point and was at 1.045 (target was 1.035-1.040). I assume this is fine... At any rate, the fermenter has the airlock on and it is sitting alone where I promise not to touch it. I do hope I have bubbles tomorrow. I swear I will run around crazy like that fish in Finding Nemo yelling "bubbles!"
Two 3.3 lb. LME (Amber) cans
1 lb. crushed crystal grain
1.5 oz hop pellets (Fuggles)
2 packets Munton's dry yeast
Here were my steps -
2 gal. spring water with grain bag (1 lb crystal) brought to boil, removed from heat, steeped for 5 additional minutes. Removed grains, added 2 cans of LME and 1.5 oz Fuggles (into my now clean nylon grain bag), brought back up to boil. At this point things were going well but my boil took FOREVER. Damn electric stove is killing me. I never felt like it was a great boil either...I was afraid of scorch though so I would stir here and there. I then reduced heat to medium and boiled gently for 30 minutes.
While this was happening, I took previously boiled water (cooling) and measured 1.5 cups of it, took the temp, and mixed in my yeast packets (then covering with plastic wrap). Problem is, I noticed after the yeast was added that the temp in my glass was uneven and actually 111 F instead of my target of 95-105 F. Hope my yeast didn't die?
So, I then cooled my wort in my ice bath (40 lbs of ice in my bathtub). Took 20 minutes when I was shooting for 10-15 and this was WITH my adding 1 gallon of spring water to try and cool it. Is it ok to add water during the cool down? Maybe that was a mistake but I was flustered that it was taking too long. I got the wort down to 71 F when I pitched the yeast (yeast was at 77 F). Took a hydrometer reading at this point and was at 1.045 (target was 1.035-1.040). I assume this is fine... At any rate, the fermenter has the airlock on and it is sitting alone where I promise not to touch it. I do hope I have bubbles tomorrow. I swear I will run around crazy like that fish in Finding Nemo yelling "bubbles!"