Brewed my second all-grain today, a gingerbread coffee stout. First time using liquid yeast (wyeast 1099) and so far so good. Hit pretty close to target numbers and put the spices to soak in vodka while the yeast starts working.
Yes!! Great name!!Dough in for an oatmeal stout a few minutes ago… perhaps I’ll name it something stupid like Night Owl’s Porridge.
My weekend starts tomorrow when Wife goes out of town for a few days (she doesn't like the smell when I brew, anybody else have that problem?) I have the grain measured out for a Lithuanian-style raw ale. It should be a pretty quick brew day because of the no-boil thing.
And I might brew a Weisenbock on Friday or Saturday if the yeast (and Vienna malt, which I won't be using in this one) I ordered yesterday get here in time. I'm way behind on my brewing this year. If not, I'll be inventorying and organizing my malts and hops, and bottling some wine.
Sparging both the grain and squash was a pain though.Props for everyone on this forum for their input - thanks to HBT, I think that I'll have another properly-executed brew - pumpkin ale - completed shortly. Roasted pumpkin (butternut squash) in BIAB bag in boil seems to be working well.
Yes its worth it though. I am making mine next week in time for Thanksgiving and its the most labor intensive beer I make. Between baking the pumpkin meat (16 pounds) sparging through the mesh bag and then I add the bag in the kettle just before it comes to a boil. Then all the light molasses, other additions, and spice additions near the end of the boil etc. etc. Turns out great every year and is requested, so I brew it to make everyone happy. Good luck with the rest of your brew day!Sparging both the grain and squash was a pain though.
Thanks. My first attempt. It's out in the shed percolating - I'm hoping for the best.Yes its worth it though. I am making mine next week in time for Thanksgiving and its the most labor intensive beer I make. Between baking the pumpkin meat (16 pounds) sparging through the mesh bag and then I add the bag in the kettle just before it comes to a boil. Then all the light molasses, other additions, and spice additions near the end of the boil etc. etc. Turns out great every year and is requested, so I brew it to make everyone happy. Good luck with the rest of your brew day!
John
Does the pumpkin really add anything other than a little color? Theoretically it should, but maybe not much. I wonder if you could accomplish the same thing with a little 40°L malt and let the spices do all the heavy lifting. OTOH, what else are you gonna do with all that pumpkin?Yes its worth it though. I am making mine next week in time for Thanksgiving and its the most labor intensive beer I make. Between baking the pumpkin meat (16 pounds) sparging through the mesh bag and then I add the bag in the kettle just before it comes to a boil. Then all the light molasses, other additions, and spice additions near the end of the boil etc. etc. Turns out great every year and is requested, so I brew it to make everyone happy. Good luck with the rest of your brew day!
John
Update: The pH, efficiency, volume, and OG were all spot on their respective targets and the carboys are ripping already. Not bad considering we had 2 boil-overs, lautering was slow as hell, and we kind of guestimated the boil time based on how much we needed to get it down.@BrewMan13 and I are brewing 13.5 gallons of a massive 1.140ish imperial stout today. Fg is 1.055-1.060 and we are barrel aging it in a fresh American oak 10 gallon barrel. Needed to double mash to handle the 55lb+ Grainbill View attachment 783261View attachment 783262View attachment 783263View attachment 783264
Cooling the wort from my new stout. Looking for 2.5 gallon @ ~1.80. Pitching 2 packs of S 04. NB hops @ 60 min and EKG @ 30. Hoping it will be tasty.I have a teen who now associates brewery smells with a specific video game![]()
1.800? Or 1.080?Cooling the wort from my new stout. Looking for 2.5 gallon @ ~1.80. Pitching 2 packs of S 04. NB hops @ 60 min and EKG @ 30. Hoping it will be tasty.
1.800? Or 1.080?
Lol. My bad 1.085 was the final OG into the fermenter.Skip the refractometer, skip the hydrometer. The question is whether a spoon stands on its own.