meschaefer
Well-Known Member
.... I could use some help figuring out where I am going wrong. I am new to the board, but not new to home brewing having been brewing for about ten years and AG brewing for about six. The problem is that my efficiency rates are all over the place and almost impossible to nail down. My last brew came in at 38% which might be an all time low, and had some other problems.
Equipment: I have three converted kegs. I use one for my boil, one to heat sparge water wich is used with a sprinkler style sparge arm. and one keg for the mash wich has a DIY copper strainer as opposed to a false bottom and is direct heated to maintain temp.
The last brew was aimed at replicating an IPA, and had the following as an ingerdient list:
20lbs 2-row - curshed with a corona style mill.
3lbs crystal (50-60L)
5lbs Amber
3 oz of Cascade Whole Leaf (7.4% alpha)
3 oz of Vanguard whole Leaf (4.6% alpha)
3 oz of Willamette Whole Leaf (4.5% alpha)
Wyeast 1056 American Ale
The procedure:
Brought 10gallons of mash water to 168 degrees and aded grains, mash temp fell to about 156 degrees and mashed for 1 hour. Occasionaly fired the mashtun, which is uninsulated in order to mainten temp.
Brought 8 gallons of sparge water to 170 degres, emptied mashtun of wort into boiling vessle (which was put to flame) and then used sprinkler style sparge arm to rinse grains collecting run off continuously and adding to boiling vessle as it heated up.
When boiling vessle came to a boil, added Cascade hops and boiled for about an hour. With 15 minutes left, I added 1/2 the Vanguard and Willamette as well as 1tbl spoon of Irish Moss.
I brought to frementation temp, with a SS drop in chiller. Pitched yeast mixed up and then split between two glass carboys. The remaining hops were placed into carbos to dry hop. After one week I tranfered to new carboys, removed hops and then kegged one week later and force carbonated. I would usually filter the beer, but was missing an o-ring on the filter.
OG- 1.036
FG 1.010
Beer was a hit at a party where it was served, but I felt it had a slight haze and was missing "mouth feel" and had a "hollow" after taste (this is may be just receipe related as I did tweak it a bit). I am brewing this weekend (a porter) and am going to make an insulation sleeve for the mashtun to help keep temp stable. I am pretty strict when it comes to sanitation, but I usually associate a haze with contamination but then again I did skip filtering. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks for any input.
Matt
(sorry for the long post, but I tried to be comprehensive)
Equipment: I have three converted kegs. I use one for my boil, one to heat sparge water wich is used with a sprinkler style sparge arm. and one keg for the mash wich has a DIY copper strainer as opposed to a false bottom and is direct heated to maintain temp.
The last brew was aimed at replicating an IPA, and had the following as an ingerdient list:
20lbs 2-row - curshed with a corona style mill.
3lbs crystal (50-60L)
5lbs Amber
3 oz of Cascade Whole Leaf (7.4% alpha)
3 oz of Vanguard whole Leaf (4.6% alpha)
3 oz of Willamette Whole Leaf (4.5% alpha)
Wyeast 1056 American Ale
The procedure:
Brought 10gallons of mash water to 168 degrees and aded grains, mash temp fell to about 156 degrees and mashed for 1 hour. Occasionaly fired the mashtun, which is uninsulated in order to mainten temp.
Brought 8 gallons of sparge water to 170 degres, emptied mashtun of wort into boiling vessle (which was put to flame) and then used sprinkler style sparge arm to rinse grains collecting run off continuously and adding to boiling vessle as it heated up.
When boiling vessle came to a boil, added Cascade hops and boiled for about an hour. With 15 minutes left, I added 1/2 the Vanguard and Willamette as well as 1tbl spoon of Irish Moss.
I brought to frementation temp, with a SS drop in chiller. Pitched yeast mixed up and then split between two glass carboys. The remaining hops were placed into carbos to dry hop. After one week I tranfered to new carboys, removed hops and then kegged one week later and force carbonated. I would usually filter the beer, but was missing an o-ring on the filter.
OG- 1.036
FG 1.010
Beer was a hit at a party where it was served, but I felt it had a slight haze and was missing "mouth feel" and had a "hollow" after taste (this is may be just receipe related as I did tweak it a bit). I am brewing this weekend (a porter) and am going to make an insulation sleeve for the mashtun to help keep temp stable. I am pretty strict when it comes to sanitation, but I usually associate a haze with contamination but then again I did skip filtering. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks for any input.
Matt
(sorry for the long post, but I tried to be comprehensive)