ChasinABuzz
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2015
- Messages
- 46
- Reaction score
- 22
So lets just say for fun, and by "for fun" I mean because I'm a dummy with the attention span of a gnat and totally did this, that I misunderstood my local Home Brew Shop owner and thought he said his recipes were 3gallon.
Then lets say I took that recipe and divided it by 3 because I have a 1 gallon setup in our small apartment...
So in theory, and as my luck would have it also in practice, I brewed a 3 gallon conversion with a gallon of water...
Which actually explains why I've been staring at a carboy for almost 2 weeks now thinking, "Why the hell is that Summer Ale so dark?..."
Now, being new to Home Brewing I'm also new to BeerSmith and I figured I'd enter the recipe into that, convert it to 3 gallons and then alter the water just to get an idea of what to expect. It's telling me my math was right (and wrong at the same time, story of my life) but if I actually have entered everything correctly, BeerSmith is saying I will have brewed a beer so high ABV that if I can't drink it, I can at least use it to strip the spray paint off my driveway....
Any insights? What should I expect from this thing? Is there a way to save it/make it tolerable? They always say you blow your second batch I guess I'm not the exception to the rule hahaha. Either way I'm not too concerned about saving it if there is a way.From what I've been told about Home Brewing it seems to be par for the course. I've always been a trial and error type person so we'll see what I can learn from this one lol.
Thanks all!,
-Chase
Then lets say I took that recipe and divided it by 3 because I have a 1 gallon setup in our small apartment...
So in theory, and as my luck would have it also in practice, I brewed a 3 gallon conversion with a gallon of water...
Which actually explains why I've been staring at a carboy for almost 2 weeks now thinking, "Why the hell is that Summer Ale so dark?..."
Now, being new to Home Brewing I'm also new to BeerSmith and I figured I'd enter the recipe into that, convert it to 3 gallons and then alter the water just to get an idea of what to expect. It's telling me my math was right (and wrong at the same time, story of my life) but if I actually have entered everything correctly, BeerSmith is saying I will have brewed a beer so high ABV that if I can't drink it, I can at least use it to strip the spray paint off my driveway....
Any insights? What should I expect from this thing? Is there a way to save it/make it tolerable? They always say you blow your second batch I guess I'm not the exception to the rule hahaha. Either way I'm not too concerned about saving it if there is a way.From what I've been told about Home Brewing it seems to be par for the course. I've always been a trial and error type person so we'll see what I can learn from this one lol.
Thanks all!,
-Chase