bigken462
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- Oct 24, 2013
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I broke ground today on my first brew. I chanced going dark on a pumpkin spiced porter extract kit from Brewers Best. It smells good, but I sure hope the stuff thins out a bunch over the next few weeks. I was not expecting it to be so syrupy looking. I fell outside the OG by just a tad. I did not know how to correct it, and rather than chance messing up worse, I just left it alone.
I chose to use a ice bath this time rather than waiting another week or so for the funds on a immersion chiller. I hope the impatience was not a bad call. It did take a long time for me to get the temp down and only then after a hour or so was I was only able to get it down to about 72-74 degrees before pitching the yeast. While doing this, I built up a few questions that I think would help me for the next batch in case I pour this one down the drain. The OG was 1.052 @ 72-74 degrees or so. Am I correct to understand that that would correlate to 1.055 given the temperature adjustment on the insert that came with the hydrometer? The low end of the target OG was 1.057
What things could I have done to get outside the target range?
What could I have done to fix it?
Here is some concerns I have.
Trying to prevent a boil over, I babysat the pot for the duration of the boil. I managed to keep a nice gentle boil going most of the time, however when I removed the lid to stir it would obviously stop boiling for just a bit. I did this for 40 minutes before adding the first bag of hops.
I begin to notice a coating on pasty stuff on the side of the pot. Assuming the was part of the malt, I kept it stirred in. Again each time I would stir, the boil would drop for a minute or so before catching up again. The second bag of hops was at the last 40 minutes into the boil which the goop on the sides would continue to form till I stirred them in again and lastly the spice when in at 50 minutes for a total of 55minute boil time.
I then submerged the pot in the kitchen sink and gave it a ice bath. All was going well, but I underestimated the amount of ice I needed. So I used a hose and created a continuous stream of cold water around the pot till the temp got down to 95-100degrees. From there I siphoned the wort into the plastic bucket. There was a bit of stuff at the bottom of the pot which ultimately ended up in the bucket before I could get it stopped. This will teach me to take my eyes off the hose, so for the most part, everything that was in the boil went into the bucket. The instruction said this would need racked into a secondary, so I hope with proper care this sediment will stay put. The temp then was about a 100 degrees where I cooled it down with cold tap water as far as it would go till I hit 5 gallons.
The temp was still about 76 degrees, so I again filled the sink up with cold running water around the bucket and continued this until the temp reduced to about 72-74 degrees or so. After looking at the back of the yeast pack, I seen it fell within the given parameters and gave the wort a good stir, then sprinkled in the yeast. Popped the lid on, filled the air lock and moved the bucket to it’s home for the next week.
In closing, I’m concerned about a few things.
1. The OG not falling within range (1.057-1.061)
2. The trub that went into the bucket.
3. The length of time it took me to get the temp reduced and pitching the yeast a cpl degrees warmer than the suggested 70 on the instructions.
Aside from those things, given this to be my first batch, I felt like it progressed ok. The kitchen was not a disaster with I got done, so I guess that itself means something. Lol
How long do you guys think I need to give it before racking it into a carboy? Would you suggest using the tap on the bucket to not disturb the trub or the racking cane?
Ingredients
Fermentables
6.6 lb. Porter LME
8 oz. Maltodextrin
SPECIALTY GRAINS
4 oz. Caramel 90L
8 oz. Carabrown®
8 oz. Dark Chocolate
SPICE PACK
hops
1 oz. Northern Brewer
1 oz. Willamette
yeast
1 Sachet
IBUs: 25 - 28
ABV: 5.0% - 6.0%
OG: 1.057 - 1.061
FG: 1.014 - 1.018
Kenny T
I chose to use a ice bath this time rather than waiting another week or so for the funds on a immersion chiller. I hope the impatience was not a bad call. It did take a long time for me to get the temp down and only then after a hour or so was I was only able to get it down to about 72-74 degrees before pitching the yeast. While doing this, I built up a few questions that I think would help me for the next batch in case I pour this one down the drain. The OG was 1.052 @ 72-74 degrees or so. Am I correct to understand that that would correlate to 1.055 given the temperature adjustment on the insert that came with the hydrometer? The low end of the target OG was 1.057
What things could I have done to get outside the target range?
What could I have done to fix it?
Here is some concerns I have.
Trying to prevent a boil over, I babysat the pot for the duration of the boil. I managed to keep a nice gentle boil going most of the time, however when I removed the lid to stir it would obviously stop boiling for just a bit. I did this for 40 minutes before adding the first bag of hops.
I begin to notice a coating on pasty stuff on the side of the pot. Assuming the was part of the malt, I kept it stirred in. Again each time I would stir, the boil would drop for a minute or so before catching up again. The second bag of hops was at the last 40 minutes into the boil which the goop on the sides would continue to form till I stirred them in again and lastly the spice when in at 50 minutes for a total of 55minute boil time.
I then submerged the pot in the kitchen sink and gave it a ice bath. All was going well, but I underestimated the amount of ice I needed. So I used a hose and created a continuous stream of cold water around the pot till the temp got down to 95-100degrees. From there I siphoned the wort into the plastic bucket. There was a bit of stuff at the bottom of the pot which ultimately ended up in the bucket before I could get it stopped. This will teach me to take my eyes off the hose, so for the most part, everything that was in the boil went into the bucket. The instruction said this would need racked into a secondary, so I hope with proper care this sediment will stay put. The temp then was about a 100 degrees where I cooled it down with cold tap water as far as it would go till I hit 5 gallons.
The temp was still about 76 degrees, so I again filled the sink up with cold running water around the bucket and continued this until the temp reduced to about 72-74 degrees or so. After looking at the back of the yeast pack, I seen it fell within the given parameters and gave the wort a good stir, then sprinkled in the yeast. Popped the lid on, filled the air lock and moved the bucket to it’s home for the next week.
In closing, I’m concerned about a few things.
1. The OG not falling within range (1.057-1.061)
2. The trub that went into the bucket.
3. The length of time it took me to get the temp reduced and pitching the yeast a cpl degrees warmer than the suggested 70 on the instructions.
Aside from those things, given this to be my first batch, I felt like it progressed ok. The kitchen was not a disaster with I got done, so I guess that itself means something. Lol
How long do you guys think I need to give it before racking it into a carboy? Would you suggest using the tap on the bucket to not disturb the trub or the racking cane?
Ingredients
Fermentables
6.6 lb. Porter LME
8 oz. Maltodextrin
SPECIALTY GRAINS
4 oz. Caramel 90L
8 oz. Carabrown®
8 oz. Dark Chocolate
SPICE PACK
hops
1 oz. Northern Brewer
1 oz. Willamette
yeast
1 Sachet
IBUs: 25 - 28
ABV: 5.0% - 6.0%
OG: 1.057 - 1.061
FG: 1.014 - 1.018
Kenny T