TwoHeadsBrewing
Well-Known Member
Brewed my first batch on the Brewzilla 35L (120v) this morning. Nothing fancy, just a Pale Ale
"Typical Pale Ale" Recipe:
Ended up with a little more volume than I wanted and 69% efficiency. I'm thinking was from MoreBeer's crush. There were some whole grains in there, so a much more coarse crush than I'm used to. I'm going to be getting my own crusher, so will try a finer crush next time.
Overall this was a really smooth brew day considering it was on a completely new setup and I haven't brewed on my own setup in over 5 years. Started heating water at 7:10am @ 76F, hit my target temp of 165F at 7:58am. Mashed in at a little over 155F, so I added some cooling water to bring it back down to 150F. Set the temperature to hold at 148F.
Started the sparge at 9:15, and ramped up the temperature controller to 214F. Finished sparge at 9:48 with a little too much in the kettle. Temperature was up to 185F by the time I ended the sparge. Boil began at 10:00am, so just about 45 minutes to get to boiling. Added the first addition of hops at 10:05 and started the boil timer.
At flame out, added the Citra and kicked on the immersion chiller and started a recirculation to help with chilling. Ground water temp was about 74F, but I was surprised how quickly it cooled down. I hit 81F by 11:30, so just about 25 minutes.
Since my kegerator is currently empty (sadness), it's now a fermentation chamber. That London Ale III yeast supposedly likes low fermentation temps around 65F for the first few days. My basement is 75F, so that's out until primary fermentation is over.
All in all, a solid brew day getting to know the Brewzilla. I really like the setup and it sure does make it easy with the self-contained electric heating elements, temp control, and pump. I didn't use any of the automatic settings this time around as I just wanted to focus on the basic use of the system. Next time I'll set the timer delay to get my mash water hot by the time I wake up. Then I can just mash in and make breakfast during the mash.
Some Pics (Moose supervising):
"Typical Pale Ale" Recipe:
- 11# Briess Pale 2-row
- 1# Crystal 40L
- 1# Carapils
- 1oz Chinook - 60mins
- 1oz Chinook - 10mins
- 2oz Citra at flame out
- Will keg with 2oz Citra dry hop
- Yeast: Wyeast London Ale III
- Volume: 5.5g in fermenter (actual 6.25)
- Gravity: 1.056 (actual 1.050)
Ended up with a little more volume than I wanted and 69% efficiency. I'm thinking was from MoreBeer's crush. There were some whole grains in there, so a much more coarse crush than I'm used to. I'm going to be getting my own crusher, so will try a finer crush next time.
Overall this was a really smooth brew day considering it was on a completely new setup and I haven't brewed on my own setup in over 5 years. Started heating water at 7:10am @ 76F, hit my target temp of 165F at 7:58am. Mashed in at a little over 155F, so I added some cooling water to bring it back down to 150F. Set the temperature to hold at 148F.
Started the sparge at 9:15, and ramped up the temperature controller to 214F. Finished sparge at 9:48 with a little too much in the kettle. Temperature was up to 185F by the time I ended the sparge. Boil began at 10:00am, so just about 45 minutes to get to boiling. Added the first addition of hops at 10:05 and started the boil timer.
At flame out, added the Citra and kicked on the immersion chiller and started a recirculation to help with chilling. Ground water temp was about 74F, but I was surprised how quickly it cooled down. I hit 81F by 11:30, so just about 25 minutes.
Since my kegerator is currently empty (sadness), it's now a fermentation chamber. That London Ale III yeast supposedly likes low fermentation temps around 65F for the first few days. My basement is 75F, so that's out until primary fermentation is over.
All in all, a solid brew day getting to know the Brewzilla. I really like the setup and it sure does make it easy with the self-contained electric heating elements, temp control, and pump. I didn't use any of the automatic settings this time around as I just wanted to focus on the basic use of the system. Next time I'll set the timer delay to get my mash water hot by the time I wake up. Then I can just mash in and make breakfast during the mash.
Some Pics (Moose supervising):