Hi all,
I brewed my first all-grain batch yesterday (a strong bitter hopped with Galaxy I'm calling King Wombat). I have been brewing extract for almost two years, and hubs (HWMBO?) surprised me with an all-grain setup (the 7 gallon Fermenter's Favorite from Northern Brewer) for my birthday this year. I made a few mistakes, but I think I'll still have beer in the end. I have a few questions, but my big one has to do with gravity readings.
I was using a bad thermometer and realized it too late (after pouring my strike water into the mash tun). After I grabbed my candy thermometer, I realized my mash temp was way too low. I scooped out some liquid and heated it on the stove and put it back,, but temp was still low. I took a reading with the refractometer at this time and thought it also seemed way low. My mash temp hovered over 140, so I mashed for almost 2 hours to try to make up for it. I'm not sure if this was the right thing to do or not.
My pre-boil gravity was 1.042 according to my refractometer. But after the boil and after I cooled it down preparing to pitch my yeast, a reading on my hydrometer showed my gravity was 1.052--right on the money. I was surprised, after the bad mash experience. I've never hit my gravity right on the nose like that with extract batches.
My question is this: what gravities are we looking for during the mash? Higher? Lower? I sat in on a homebrew club once and watched as they took gravity readings through the mash and the boil. What are we looking for? Any help?
Thanks,
Maggie
I brewed my first all-grain batch yesterday (a strong bitter hopped with Galaxy I'm calling King Wombat). I have been brewing extract for almost two years, and hubs (HWMBO?) surprised me with an all-grain setup (the 7 gallon Fermenter's Favorite from Northern Brewer) for my birthday this year. I made a few mistakes, but I think I'll still have beer in the end. I have a few questions, but my big one has to do with gravity readings.
I was using a bad thermometer and realized it too late (after pouring my strike water into the mash tun). After I grabbed my candy thermometer, I realized my mash temp was way too low. I scooped out some liquid and heated it on the stove and put it back,, but temp was still low. I took a reading with the refractometer at this time and thought it also seemed way low. My mash temp hovered over 140, so I mashed for almost 2 hours to try to make up for it. I'm not sure if this was the right thing to do or not.
My pre-boil gravity was 1.042 according to my refractometer. But after the boil and after I cooled it down preparing to pitch my yeast, a reading on my hydrometer showed my gravity was 1.052--right on the money. I was surprised, after the bad mash experience. I've never hit my gravity right on the nose like that with extract batches.
My question is this: what gravities are we looking for during the mash? Higher? Lower? I sat in on a homebrew club once and watched as they took gravity readings through the mash and the boil. What are we looking for? Any help?
Thanks,
Maggie