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What I did for beer today

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Currently, I am doing a timed deep clean for most of the equipment I used for the Kölsch, simultaneously, and will analyse the samples.
 

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Checked on the pilsner - day 2.5... still bubbling nicely, but no longer at speed metal tempos... Currently about 140 bpm. Should finish up the fast bubble era in a day or two.

Readjusted carb levels - turned up the English bitter because I am impatient, and turned down the pale ale as it is now fully carbed and could settle down a little.

Day 3 for my next stout in the keezer. My last stout batch feels like it has maybe 3-6 pours left, so I put in the replacement keg of stout on Tuesday and began to carb/nitro mix ... So it is ready on day one when I need it ready.
 
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Last week I recieved my 6 regulator board and all the hardware. Today I finally got it installed and everything hooked up. Time will tell how well it works. But it has to be better than switching a single Co2 line from keg to keg.
@T Murph I have that duo tight setup and love it. I would suggest getting 6 shut off valves and 6 check valves (back flow) ... Both are helpful in ongoing management of CO2 pressure and changing out kegs. Also ... The regulator gauges of 0-15 is much better than the 0-60 for precision and ease of use for older folks like me.

As for the Saaz and mittelfru combo ... Did a batch (day 4 of fermenting) and looking forward to it. Thanks for the suggestion.
 
When I made the switch over to the Brew Buckets I looked at those spigot and racking arm gaskets and I determined that they were flashing, neon-lighted failure points, so I put together a crash box for those gaskets. You can see it pictured below. To my surprise, they've been quite durable. I've occasionally swapped them out for reasons of caution, but I have yet to have one actually fail. (way to jinx yourself, BC)

Good, cheap insurance there. You can never have too many o-rings on hand.

When I first bought a Brew Bucket, that was one of the "weak link" things I spotted. The racking arm o-rings stretch easily and the next time I'd try to insert the arm into the valve, the rings would deform, pop out of the grooves and stick out.

There was a post on HBT where they suggested better replacement rings, from The Oring Store. So I ordered a bunch of them. Buna rubber. I can now replace the rings every 2nd brew or so.

As for the "rotating racking arm," I never use that. I position the racking tube pointing up all along, trub be damned. The prospect of twisting a valve with a batch of beer behind it gives me more than a little pause. If you intend to rotate it clockwise at racking time that means keeping the valve slightly loose during fermentation so it can rotate 1/4 turn later. Going the other direction is a non-starter. You want 5 gallons of beer on the floor? Because that's how you get 5 gallons of beer on the floor.

If I get a little trub in the racking tube it blasts out the minute I open the valve. I catch that in a cup, and I only lose an ounce or so. Then I go about racking.

If the trub doesn't blast out (only happened to me once), a gentle push with CO2 at 1 or 2 psi will get things flowing.
 
Today I brewed 15 litres of dry stout
2400g Vienna malt
300g Rolled oats
150g Chocolate malt
150g Roat Barley
100g Medium Crystal 240 L
150g Brown sugar and Dextrose.
Bramling cross 30g at 45m 20g at 15m
CML Five yeast.

I also bottled my Niagara Wheat beer into 22 half litre bottles.
 
Did a HB stout keg transfer perfectly. Hurray. What is perfect?

1) Knowing the old stout corny is gonna kick in the next 10 days.
2) pulling the on deck stout out of closet storage and cold crashing over 4-5 days
3) putting the chilled on deck keg and carbing it with beer gas once or twice a day for at least 5 days.
4) old stout keg kicked. Switch beer line and beer gas to the "ready" stout and pour off a few inches in case you have some trub left in the lines.
5) pour the new stout keg. It's cold. Has a solid head. Awesome bubbles with no waiting.

I love stout and being without HB stout tap #6 ... Will not stand. Ha.
 
I had a really light day scheduled yesterday, so I set myself up to do some early afternoon brewing. I haven't brewed in the afternoon in forever, it was really weird--"Ugh! It's 4.30 and I still have 20 minutes to go on the boil! What's going on?!!!!"

The odd bit of confusion aside, it was a pleasant enough brew day and I now have 6.5 gallons of ordinary bitter passing through 1.025 as I write this. No complaints.
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Bottled 2-5 gallon batches (48 bottles/ea) "Hungry Brown Dog" American Brown ale; and Kujo's Cave Porter @ 7.9 % abv. Don't anticipate getting after the Porter until the leaves turn. Looking forward to the HBD in a couple of weeks. Have 2 pale/hoppy ales planned for later this week to round out my summer
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brewing.
 
1) upped the temp in the inkbird "ferm chamber" for the German Pilsner ... Day 2 of D rest. Now at 63°F after 13 days at 55°F.

2) Weighed grains for an 11 gal batch of Mocha Irish Stout. Made a change to the recipe, using a blend of breiss dark chocolate and chocolate malt (450L vs 350L). Probably will brew tomorrow but can wait - nothing milled yet.

3) swapped out a kicked keg (pale ale) for an already chilled and carbed blonde ale. Going to move another corny to the "on deck circle" in the keezer.

4) more work tweaking out the man cave where the beers disappear. Fixed a crappy old ceiling fan to looking mint. Just Elbow grease followed by paint.

Busy day. Time for a cold one.
 
@day_trippr I keep meaning to make that recipe you generously shared! Only ingredient I don't have easy access to is "Caramalt". Would briess caramel 10L or 20L be a good substitute? Turns out he already answered that in the very thread I linked ("yes, those are good substitutions for caramalt")
 
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One more day left on the German Pilsner before a slow cold crash, and lager. Checked for the FG which came in at 1.002. yeah, it's gonna be dry as a bone. The sample was magnificent and I know this won't last long in the summer heat once carbed and tapped.

Also brewed 11 gal of stout this morning. In the fermenters and ready to do the bubble dance tonight, tomorrow, etc ..
 

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Encouraged by the results of last week's late afternoon brew session, I'm doing it again. I'm doing the Ron Patinson 1971 Boddington's recipe. I hate pinching other people's recipes, but it's a good one.

My wee tiny little mash.
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Can't argue with success. I'm not above pinching a good recipe. Sometimes I MacGyver it and change one small thing.

Now if I could just close in on a Fuller's London Porter...
 
Can't argue with success. I'm not above pinching a good recipe. Sometimes I MacGyver it and change one small thing.

Now if I could just close in on a Fuller's London Porter...
I was surprised when I saw this recipe for Fuller's 1897 Porter. It's basically the UK porter that I had iterated into over the years. The only difference is that I use only a pound of invert #3 and more base malt with a slightly lower OG. I guess it's not all that surprising, it's not a complex recipe and the basic ingredients are well-established. It makes a nice porter, although I've never used 26% invert. That seems like a bit much to me.

With that said, I think Fuller's is much more modest with their use of invert sugar in their contemporary brewery. They may not even use it at all. Not sure where I remember that from, but it's certainly lodged in the back of my noggin. I've found that one pound at 1.054 gets the job done. It provides the flavors you want without thinning the ale too much.
 
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