Stand
Well-Known Member
"You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist." -Nietzsche
Lol, I had to look up "moke". Looks like a British / Aussie thing.What a pretentious moke!
I do the same with my grains. There's not a close LHBS, so if I have grains on hand I can brew without 2 weeks of planning.I find owning a mill takes a lot of stress out of planning a brew day. Hand in hand with my own mill is simplification of my grain bills.
I buy grain in bulk and store the grain unground in 5 gallon buckets with gamma seal lids. By focusing on simple grain bills I don't need to keep that many varieties on hand. I generally stock pilsner and pale as base malts, 15-20L caramel/crystal, flaked corn and maybe a pound or two of something for color. The base malts I buy in 50-55 pound sacks and the others I get usually 10 pounds at a time. I buy the grain to resupply my grain inventory when I happen to be out and about near one of the three LHBS in my area. If for some reason I needed a special grain for a recipe I'd probably order that online - but haven't felt a need to do that for a very long time.
I practice similar strategies with my hops and yeast. Maintain inventory of what I expect to need as opposed to buying for specific batches. These inventories make it possible for me to have a brew day when an opportunity presents as opposed to needing to plan a brew for a week or so in advance.
Or he meant mook? That is definitely a thing here, and one of my favorite wordsLol, I had to look up "moke". Looks like a British / Aussie thing.![]()
I didn't get the sense you were trying to be a prick, but it seemed to come across just a little bit high & mighty. I think my processes are extremely tight, definitely much tighter than my neighbor and fellow brewer(and good friend) who lives down the street from me, but although we discuss brewing and trade info a lot I try really really hard to never imply my methods are better and his stuff is in any way inferior. It's just a bad look I think. After all we're talking about beer, and a completely subjective medium of judging it(taste). Again, I don't really think you meant it that way and your posts are almost always informative and congenial so I definitely don't think you're a ******.The last sentence in my post is the important part, and should imply what you bring up regarding style, @VirginiaHops1. No intention of being a ******. I'm simply stating a relevant fact.
Lol, I had to look up "moke". Looks like a British / Aussie thing.![]()
Thanks. I checked the price (Kunze, Wolfgang. Technology Malting and Brewing, 6th English edition, VLB Berlin 2019.
I can't personally vouch for this website, but this is the best price anybody's found that I'm aware of, it was shared on the LOB forum by someone who did buy it thereThanks. I checked the price () & added the title to my wish list.
I saw that. I've been waiting to see if it goes anywhere interesting.
I was surprised at the number of breweries I spoke with that do this very thing... some of them make damn good and popular beer as well...I have never seen anything more than anecdotal evidence that grain needs to be milled immediately before being used. Hell, some breweries buy bags of grain pre-milled.
Actually the grain is submerged in degassed water and then milled. It's called wet milling, and it's practiced by some German commercial breweries. Unfortunately it's not really practical at a home brew level.What about just throwing the grain into a giant oxygen deprived blender with the mash water and blending it up with NO oxygen exposure? Surely that will result in superior taste for all? (I am kidding here)