Whattawort
Well-Known Member
The last 2 batches I've done, I did as favors to friends and/or family and each brew day was filled with frustration and disaster of epic proportions. Now, I've been making beer for quite a while and I've had my ups and downs and run-in with equipment and user error, but never a combination of all of them in two brew sessions.
Session #1
- I had a stuck sparge to the point where I had to ladel the wort over a collander into my boil pot thus resulting in several burns, ruined shoes, and no where close to the volumes I needed
- The contributing factor to the stuck sparge was that my braided hose somehow came completely off at some point during the mash
- Had a leak somewhere in one of the lines for the CF chiller resulting in some minor flooding
- Pump failed and had to rig up a 3 tier system while juggling 2 batches
- In a mad dash to just be done with brewing that day, I threw all my half-washed equipment into my car along with a 3/4 batch of stout in my leather-interior car. I think everyone knows how sticky wort is.
- What was anticipated to be a 4.5hr brew day was closer to 6
Session #2 - 34 degrees F in the garage
- Started at 7:30pm (that should tell you something right off the bat)
- Another stuck sparge. This time it was the bazooka screen that came off at somepoint during the sparge
- Had to clean and sanitize a nasty keg and 2 buckets (freezing water gets sprayed all over the damned place) while waiting on what little wort was dripping into the pot
- 1hr behind I decide enough is enough and I find a collander (again) and a metal skewer and begin to carefully create a flow through the mash tun valve
- Stuck sparge is magically unstuck and half a gallon of hot wort and grain spew all over my hands, legs, and feet (ruining another pair of shoes and causing more burns)
- Finally get all the wort into the kettle and start boil (2hrs behind now)
- Forgot to borrow the CF chiller (tack on more time)
- STUCK kettle valve (WTF?). Didnt mess with the skewer this time and just waited for it to clear itself.
- Magically it clears and near boiling wort flies all over the place including all over me (Ijust happened to be looking at the valve at that time)
At this point I stuck the damned fermentor in the beer fridge, said F' IT! and went to take a shower leaving a gigantic mess behind. Ending time: 1:30am
NOW, the morale to the story is that had I been brewing for myself and the enjoyment I get from taking my time, I bet a lot of this wouldn't have happened. But since I'm such a nice guy and like to make people happy, I ensured my friend and brother that their beers would be ready for Christmas. Well.....f a bunch of that from now on. When it comes to beer, you get what I make, on my schedule, at my discretion from now on. It's my hobby....not my job. BAH!
Session #1
- I had a stuck sparge to the point where I had to ladel the wort over a collander into my boil pot thus resulting in several burns, ruined shoes, and no where close to the volumes I needed
- The contributing factor to the stuck sparge was that my braided hose somehow came completely off at some point during the mash
- Had a leak somewhere in one of the lines for the CF chiller resulting in some minor flooding
- Pump failed and had to rig up a 3 tier system while juggling 2 batches
- In a mad dash to just be done with brewing that day, I threw all my half-washed equipment into my car along with a 3/4 batch of stout in my leather-interior car. I think everyone knows how sticky wort is.
- What was anticipated to be a 4.5hr brew day was closer to 6
Session #2 - 34 degrees F in the garage
- Started at 7:30pm (that should tell you something right off the bat)
- Another stuck sparge. This time it was the bazooka screen that came off at somepoint during the sparge
- Had to clean and sanitize a nasty keg and 2 buckets (freezing water gets sprayed all over the damned place) while waiting on what little wort was dripping into the pot
- 1hr behind I decide enough is enough and I find a collander (again) and a metal skewer and begin to carefully create a flow through the mash tun valve
- Stuck sparge is magically unstuck and half a gallon of hot wort and grain spew all over my hands, legs, and feet (ruining another pair of shoes and causing more burns)
- Finally get all the wort into the kettle and start boil (2hrs behind now)
- Forgot to borrow the CF chiller (tack on more time)
- STUCK kettle valve (WTF?). Didnt mess with the skewer this time and just waited for it to clear itself.
- Magically it clears and near boiling wort flies all over the place including all over me (Ijust happened to be looking at the valve at that time)
At this point I stuck the damned fermentor in the beer fridge, said F' IT! and went to take a shower leaving a gigantic mess behind. Ending time: 1:30am
NOW, the morale to the story is that had I been brewing for myself and the enjoyment I get from taking my time, I bet a lot of this wouldn't have happened. But since I'm such a nice guy and like to make people happy, I ensured my friend and brother that their beers would be ready for Christmas. Well.....f a bunch of that from now on. When it comes to beer, you get what I make, on my schedule, at my discretion from now on. It's my hobby....not my job. BAH!