blip01
Well-Known Member
Brewed this again on Sat. Hit 1.094 w/ BIAB! I'm going to soak oak cubes and vanilla beans in bourbon, then add to the secondary.
EXTROVERT said:I brewed this recipe Saturday - my first ever all grain brew. Talk about diving right in. I bought a used three tier brew sculpture from a local guy, 3 10 gallon stainless kettles each with their own burner. It worked great... but, as a newbie, I quickly learned things I need to do differently next time out and I'm worried about how it's all going to turn out in the long run.
First questionable thing I did: I made a yeast starter the day before the brew (long enough in advance?) and I made it small. I only had 4 oz of DME. I had it in a bomber with brown glass, so I couldn't see it very well - but it did develop a head and an aroma so it worked but to what extent I don't know. I poured my wort in the bottle through a funnel then tried to pour my liquid yeast in the same way - duh - the liquid yeast poured on through but the hard yeast (the cake?) just got stuck and I had to force as much through as I could with a sanitized straw. So I don't know if I didn't get enough yeast in the wort in the first place. Is the hard part dead yeast?
Prior to 24 hours my brew surface had developed a small head and the blowoff this morning was bubbling once every four or five seconds... it's only been 36 hours.
So - it appears to be working.
Can't wait to do it again!
Brewed this on New Years Day, racking it to secondary tonight. I soaked about a cup of oak chips in Knob Creek and I am going to transfer it on top of those.
I will let you know how it tastes in another 2 months.
Can someone who's bottle conditioned for carbonation chime in to let us non-keggers know if bottling yeast is needed on this one? I've still got a few months before bottling, but would like to know in advance if I can just add some priming sugar or if I'm going to have to add some yeast too.
Thanks!
That is what I plan on doing as well. I hear the only real difference is that it ages faster in bulk vs. bottles. Either way a beer that is this big and complex won't be drunk for awhile so I am sure it will age fine no matter what.
I found after the first two batches that adding a little yeast goes a long way in bottling, otherwise it seems this beer is consistently a little less carbonated than I like.
Riseabovebb said:Thanks! Any recommendations on yeast strain, volumes, dry vs. liquid?
mux said:
Glad to hear it still mellowed.Bottled my first version of this today. Brew day was 7/21, racked it to secondary on 8/19. OG was 1.094, FG 1.019. I added a packet of cheap Munton's dry yeast to the bottling bucket to ensure there's enough active yeast to carbonate.
Right after fermentation was complete it had a rather harsh, fusel-y flavor. But that has been mellowing. It isn't quite there yet, but the rich dark malt complexity is moving forward and I think this will end up an excellent beer.
How long do you leave in Oak chips? Amount used? Thanks
So the grains have arrived and i picked up the yeast (Wyeast London Ale 1028). Going to make a starter today. Just a few questions as this will be my first all grain that is not a kit from Austin Homebrew.
1. Does anyone have this already in a program like Brewtarget or beersmith that they want to share?
2. To whoever added coffee how much and when? The plan is to cold brew it.
Thanks!