emr25
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2015
- Messages
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Brewed this last Saturday (2/20), it was our third overall homebrew and second BIAB. We implemented some new procedures this time, including a yeast starter for the 1968 using a Stir Starter stir plate and 1.5L of 1.040 starter wort, as well as a better method of insulating the brew kettle during the 60 minute mash (we were right at 152* when we closed the kettle, only stirred once, and were at 147* after the 60 minutes, which is not too bad for garage brewing on one of the coldest days we have had here in GA this year).
Hit a pre-boil OG of 1.053 (0.001 higher than expected via Priceless BIAB Calculator), and a post-boil OG of 1.069 (0.004 higher than the expected recipe OG), which means our squeezing process was a little more efficient than expected.
Decanted and pitched the yeast slurry around 66*, and have maintained 64-66* throughout so far. Fermentation was very active by about 18 hours in, and did not slow down until Day 3 or Day 4. Much improved over our first two homebrew batches (a liquid extract IPA kit from MoreBeer and a BIAB Chocolate Oatmeal Porter recipe we got online).
The only difference to the recipe from the OP was the addition of a 1.25 oz Citra dry hop at Day 3, added directly to the primary. I ordered 10 oz of Citra (recipe calls for 8.75 oz) and knew I wanted to add the extra 1.25 oz somewhere, but hadn't decided when. We used RO water with 1 tsp CaCl and 1/2 tsp Gypsum per 5 gallons of mash and sparge water (from the "Northeast Style IPA" thread here on HomeBrew Talk). The dry hop addition at Day 3 is in line with the thinking that hop interaction with the active yeast contributes to the "NE Style" IPA that is so popular with so many right now.
The standard 3 oz Citra dry hop will be added at Day 14, with the primary carboy moved to the fridge at Day 21 for cold crashing, and to the keg at Day 23 for packaging. Two weeks at 12-14 psi will put our keg tapping date around Day 37 from brew day.
Looking forward to this one, it should be our best homebrew yet and we have learned a lot through these first three batches! I will post back once we have a FG reading and once we are pouring from the tap in about 30 days!
Hit a pre-boil OG of 1.053 (0.001 higher than expected via Priceless BIAB Calculator), and a post-boil OG of 1.069 (0.004 higher than the expected recipe OG), which means our squeezing process was a little more efficient than expected.
Decanted and pitched the yeast slurry around 66*, and have maintained 64-66* throughout so far. Fermentation was very active by about 18 hours in, and did not slow down until Day 3 or Day 4. Much improved over our first two homebrew batches (a liquid extract IPA kit from MoreBeer and a BIAB Chocolate Oatmeal Porter recipe we got online).
The only difference to the recipe from the OP was the addition of a 1.25 oz Citra dry hop at Day 3, added directly to the primary. I ordered 10 oz of Citra (recipe calls for 8.75 oz) and knew I wanted to add the extra 1.25 oz somewhere, but hadn't decided when. We used RO water with 1 tsp CaCl and 1/2 tsp Gypsum per 5 gallons of mash and sparge water (from the "Northeast Style IPA" thread here on HomeBrew Talk). The dry hop addition at Day 3 is in line with the thinking that hop interaction with the active yeast contributes to the "NE Style" IPA that is so popular with so many right now.
The standard 3 oz Citra dry hop will be added at Day 14, with the primary carboy moved to the fridge at Day 21 for cold crashing, and to the keg at Day 23 for packaging. Two weeks at 12-14 psi will put our keg tapping date around Day 37 from brew day.
Looking forward to this one, it should be our best homebrew yet and we have learned a lot through these first three batches! I will post back once we have a FG reading and once we are pouring from the tap in about 30 days!