Yes it does, but it seems oxygen on the cold side does not have the large effects on beer as it does on the hot side
wow you've turned my whole world upside down
Yes it does, but it seems oxygen on the cold side does not have the large effects on beer as it does on the hot side
They are pretty clear the glasses were compensating too quickly, here is the LODO after filtering to a serving keg
Yes it does, but it seems oxygen on the cold side does not have the large effects on beer as it does on the hot side
And the 2017 Webby for Best Internet Troll goes too....
:Smack:
Picture of two jars of 1056 yeast collected from a blonde ale a little over 7 weeks ago; both were initially filled to nearly the brim.
The only difference between the two is the amount of headspace/oxygen in the jars.
Jar on the left has never been opened; jar on right was opened once to remove 3 spoonfuls of yeast about 7 weeks ago.
View attachment 398823
BTW, those pickle slices are really, really old![]()
Incredible!
I was asked to post this here
Left glass lodo helles, right glass non lodo helles, both used wlp830, identical recipe, grits, water was distilled then built up to match within 3ppm, same fermenting temps, same mash schedule, the whole ball of wax.
Left 6 weeks lagering
Right 8 weeks lagering
Neither one has been filtered yet, I am picking up 2 serving kegs tomorrow
Lodo has pleasant hops nose a little low for my preference, nice bread notes, smooth mouth feel, just dry enough to easily put 3 of these down quick fast and in a hurry.
The lodo required NO acid additions what so ever, the non LODO required acid in the mash to lower the ph to the preferred level. As I haven't built my sourgut reactor yet, that coming after I return from vacation in 2 weeks.
For those interested, I was asked to brew some beer for Brewtroller for the National Homebrew Convention. They will be serving the beer (pale ale) on Friday, from 11-3 (or until gone) by special request.
I know it tasted alright last night, but who knows what will happen to it from now until Friday! Here's to hoping for the best.
Just ask for it by using my name.
(This is a low oxygen beer of course)
For those interested, I was asked to brew some beer for Brewtroller for the National Homebrew Convention. They will be serving the beer (pale ale) on Friday, from 11-3 (or until gone) by special request.
I know it tasted alright last night, but who knows what will happen to it from now until Friday! Here's to hoping for the best.
Just ask for it by using my name.
(This is a low oxygen beer of course)
I gave a heads up to my friend who was there, and he said they ended up not serving the beer HBCon.
Welllll. I was all set to deliver the beer on Tuesday. I found out last minute that there was no cold storage for a day or so and my beer would have to sit in a trailer in the heat(high 90's heat index) until then. I chose to not bring it down until cooler space was available, but then I got stuck at work.![]()
Well, I underlet my mash for the first time today
90 minutes later, my first stuck mash. 1.3+ qt/#
Stirred well, but not hard after all the strike water was in there
Dozens of batches on this system and never a stuck mash.
I'll be investing in a brew bag for the cooler for sure. $50 or so is worth never dealing with this again
[...]The underlet process itself is not likely to be the culprit.
Same mill setting
It was a fairly large grain bill, mostly 2row. No wheat or oats.
After wrestling with it, it seems that it caused some compaction in my tun at entrance/exit. Better design wouldn't cause it to happen in the future.
Just funny that I was on point to have my best near LoDO batch execution to date, which transpired in me dumping buckets of hot wort into my kettle. Guess I'll have to take care of my lautering system first
Recently when i started to push my system to its limits in terms of batch size i found that my mash tun will hit a point where the grain bed is so deep that it can't recirculate without becoming stuck. Ultra slow recirculating rates resolve the issue, but then it takes half an hour to step, which sucks.
For an idea of what i'm dealing with... when i max my system that puts approx 33lbs of grain into a 15G boiler maker MLT, which gives approx 16" of wet, lightly compacted grain bed. As the bed settles all that pump suction tries to pull through the bed, and when it encounters resistance towards the top, the bed below ends up taking the brunt of it, leading to compaction.
Btw, if anyone successfully uses a similar MT(huge cooler), and a wilser bag, what drainage system has worked well for you? Was thinking just a 3 pipe cpvc system or a combination of cpvc and reinforced silicon tubing.
As the bed settles all that pump suction tries to pull through the bed, and when it encounters resistance towards the top, the bed below ends up taking the brunt of it, leading to compaction.
While not as big as your system, I have a 70qt Coleman and a bag. I found the bag was getting pulled into the intake, causing issues during recirc. I took a 2" pvc pipe the length of the cooler and cut it in half. The I drilled holes in it. It looks like swiss cheese. The half-pipe sits over the intake and runs the length of the cooler to provide a channel. The bag sits on top and provides a filter. I do a lot of wheat beers and have only had one stuck sparge with it. And even there, all I had to do was lift the bag.
............. I've used the same philosophy in my tun and have a simple manometer (sightglass) plumbed into the bottom of my tun. When I'm pumping my RIMS, I'm throttling the pump discharge so that the head at the bottom of my tun doesn't get any lower than the bottom of the tun. That means that I'm limiting the pressure drop across my bed to the depth of the bed (say 1 to 1.5 ft, instead of adding another 20 ft to it).
So you should be able to see that we do need to monitor and control the head placed on the grainbed by controlling amount of flow through the grainbed. Running a pump wide-open is much more likely to impose a high suction head that will compress the bed. Install a manometer at the bottom of your tun and you'll know what flowrate your bed can handle.
Recently when i started to push my system to its limits in terms of batch size i found that my mash tun will hit a point where the grain bed is so deep that it can't recirculate without becoming stuck. Ultra slow recirculating rates resolve the issue, but then it takes half an hour to step, which sucks.
I assume here that your sightglass is plumbed into a "shared port" as your pump? Are you saying that you limit the level in the sightglass to no lower than the grain bed height?