I have been brewing off and on for a few years and I always intended to go all grain at some point. So I decided now was as good a time as any.
I had to upgrade some of my gear from my old aluminum turkey fryer set up. First up is the kettle, I bought the 15 gallon spike brewing kettle. I thought that this would be a size for the occasional low gravity ten gallon batch or a high gravity 5.
So shiny.

I picked up the recipe and ingredients from the local brew shop and used their grinder.


I got the brew bag, pulley system, gloves, and I even picked up the binder clips from brewinabag.com. I already had the ladder and this seemed to work fine.


I used the BIAB calculator to figure out the strike temp and water level for my 14lbs of grain. The mash temp was right where I wanted at 154, I gave it a pretty health stir and put it to bed.

I was just going to let it sit for the full hour but I decided to unbutton it at 30 minutes and give it one stir before wrapping it back up. I had these leftover moving blankets and a bungie to use for insulation. I was at about 152f at the end of the hour.
For the mash out I pulled some slack out of the system to get the bag off of the bottom.

I bought the thermal gloves from brew in a bag and squeezed the hell out of the bag while the wort came to a boil. The ratcheting pulley worked great.
The boil was much easier with my new kettle with the added head space.
Cooling was a little bit of an issue, my old chiller was a great size for a 7 gallon pot but was not ideal for this one. This should be my last day for it though since I got the confirmation that my Hydra has shipped.

My initial gravity came out at 1.063 which I am pretty proud of on my first brew. I am going to have to do some more research to determine what kind of efficiency that is. And here is it's home for the next few weeks.
I am optimistic at this point and I'm excited to try my first all grain beer.
I had to upgrade some of my gear from my old aluminum turkey fryer set up. First up is the kettle, I bought the 15 gallon spike brewing kettle. I thought that this would be a size for the occasional low gravity ten gallon batch or a high gravity 5.
So shiny.

I picked up the recipe and ingredients from the local brew shop and used their grinder.


I got the brew bag, pulley system, gloves, and I even picked up the binder clips from brewinabag.com. I already had the ladder and this seemed to work fine.


I used the BIAB calculator to figure out the strike temp and water level for my 14lbs of grain. The mash temp was right where I wanted at 154, I gave it a pretty health stir and put it to bed.

I was just going to let it sit for the full hour but I decided to unbutton it at 30 minutes and give it one stir before wrapping it back up. I had these leftover moving blankets and a bungie to use for insulation. I was at about 152f at the end of the hour.
For the mash out I pulled some slack out of the system to get the bag off of the bottom.

I bought the thermal gloves from brew in a bag and squeezed the hell out of the bag while the wort came to a boil. The ratcheting pulley worked great.
The boil was much easier with my new kettle with the added head space.
Cooling was a little bit of an issue, my old chiller was a great size for a 7 gallon pot but was not ideal for this one. This should be my last day for it though since I got the confirmation that my Hydra has shipped.

My initial gravity came out at 1.063 which I am pretty proud of on my first brew. I am going to have to do some more research to determine what kind of efficiency that is. And here is it's home for the next few weeks.
I am optimistic at this point and I'm excited to try my first all grain beer.