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BrewHack

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2021
Messages
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Location
Vancouver
I've been thinking about brewing for about 8 years; ever since I cleaned out my grandpa's basement and scored a bunch of bottles, plastic fermenters, and instruments. A while back I bought a turkey fryer that was on sale, thinking I would just use the burner. All this stuff sat in my storage for years. Just couldn't bring myself to take the plunge. Well I guess all I need was a pandemic.

A friend on my soccer team posted his grain bill in the team chat. "$30 for 20L of beer LOL". This got me looking into brewing again. I started reading forums, blogs, and watching YouTube videos. All the sudden something clicked and I understood the general process. One thing I discovered is, there is no one right way. A lot of people claim to have great results with different methods. So I set in to designing my own method. That is when the obsession really started to set in. Brewing beer has been all I could think about since that moment. I ordered some miscellaneous things online and went for it.

Turkey fryer - BIAB - carboy - keg

First brew going into the fermenter box.
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Good looking first brew recipe! Simple and straightforward, yet somewhat ambitious for a first time brewer. All grain, dry hopping. Indeed, not really advanced brewing, but a lot more involved than an extract or mini-mash for the maiden voyage. Welcome aboard, and 'Fair Winds and a Following Sea' in your journey into this hobby.
 
It seems so daunting at first and then you do it and it’s not hard or daunting at all! Good luck with the obsession, I mean hobby.
 
Absolutely love the recipe! Simple, straightforward, clear direction. I went through a phase where I wanted every nuanced grain and hop flavor from 15 different ingredients all in one beer. It took me a while to realize that incredible complexity can come from the simplest of recipes. Well done on your first beer!
 
Absolutely love the recipe! Simple, straightforward, clear direction. I went through a phase where I wanted every nuanced grain and hop flavor from 15 different ingredients all in one beer. It took me a while to realize that incredible complexity can come from the simplest of recipes. Well done on your first beer!
I'm hoping to tweak this recipe over time and get it as close as possible to my favorite beer, Persephone's Pale Ale.
 
Care to post some more details on that fermentation chamber?
Sure, not much to it. I used old 2x4s to screw together a box big enough for my carboy. I had some casters and an unused toilet seat cover that I used to build a truck for rolling the carboy in and out. I insulated the inside with 1/2" foam board, most of which I had laying around as well.

My basement is pretty cool, so I only needed to worry about heating the box. I bought this small heading element.
https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B07PJB4TY7
I added an old computer heatsink and fan to help move the heat off the element. I wired the heater up to a baseboard thermostat which is proving to give ****** temperature control. Setpoint is 20degC, temperature fluctuates between 18 and 22. Will upgrade to an STC-1000 later.
20210210_133521.jpg
 
Here is my first beer day 7.
20210221_112851.jpg


It has cleared up a little more since then. I dry hopped today, day 10. I don't know if I'm more excited to drink it or empty fermenter so I can start my next brew.
 
Great looking first brew. Light years ahead of my 1 gallon man crate gift my wife surely regrets now.

Keep in mind active fermentation will create heat and raise the temps a little or a lot. Those stick on thermometers are accurate enough to give you an idea of the liquid temp inside.

Data from my last brew day - 2/18
Looking at the temp from a thermowell on the inkbird app:
(The wifi version has temp logging.)
Fermonster wearing a winter coat

55f ambient
66 set point

The temperature in my fermenter went from 66 to 67 in 2 hours. My system cooled it back down to 66 in 15 minutes and the process repeated for 3 days before any heat was needed. I'm not sure where that temperature goes if left unchecked.
 
The temperature in my fermenter went from 66 to 67 in 2 hours. My system cooled it back down to 66 in 15 minutes and the process repeated for 3 days before any heat was needed. I'm not sure where that temperature goes if left unchecked.

Thanks for the tip. I have no idea how warm my brew got when fermentation took off. Luckily US-05 has a high temperature range, max 28C (82F), and my basement temperature was 14C (57F). So I should be ok this time. I'll have to watch for that in the future.
 
So I took a gravity sample today, day 12. Gravity has gone from 1.054 to 1.008. When I drank the sample I was surprised there was almost no hop aroma. Especially 2 days after dry hopping. Does it just need more time? There are 2 oz of hops in a sock.
 
I transferred my beer from the carboy to the keg last night using a CO2 transfer system I bought. It worked ok, but not worth the money I spent on it. The racking cane was too short and a couple inches of good beer was left behind.

20210226_082330.jpg


I siphoned out a couple cups and drank it. Tasted like flat beer with harsh flavours. Hops aroma was still missing. Mouth feel had improved since I last drank a sample. It might turn out ok after a week chilling in the keg under serving pressure.

Cleaning the carboy wasn't too bad, but getting the hop sock out was tricky. I had to fish the knot out of the opening so I could untie it. Then I painstakingly scooped the hops out with a finger until the bulb of hop was small enough to fit through the opening. I'll have to think of a better way to dry hop.
 
The sock likely stifled some of the dry hop potential and illustrated how much of a pain it is to “hop sock” in a carboy. I stoped doing that for reasons you described. Now I just toss my hops in loose.

As far as no hop aroma: I think the massive amounts of dry hops in commercial beers have desensitized many of us. If it’s not where you want it you can always dry hop in the keg or simply adjust your recipe for next time. I bet if you told someone they were about to try a pale lager and handed them your beer, they remark about how highly hopped it is. All things are relative and that goes for current hoppy beer trends.
 
using a CO2 transfer system I bought. It worked ok, but not worth the money I spent on it.
I see a racking cane with a quick-disconnect on it. What else came with it?
The $3 orange carboy cap is essential as is the racking cane. Anything else can be cobbled together from vinyl tubing, no?

The racking cane was too short and a couple inches of good beer was left behind.
You'd need a longer one for that size carboy, you can buy those for $12 or so. Stick with stainless, it will last a lifetime when treated well.
You can lengthen the cane by sticking a piece of vinyl tubing on the bottom end. But the inverter tippy (that redirects the flow to come from above to prevent sucking up trub) won't fit on the vinyl tubing, you'd need another piece of stainless tubing for that.

In a pinch you could saw off 1-2 inches or so and put a splice of vinyl tubing in between. ;)
 
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