Kegged a Czech Pils…


I went to the store to buy some. I ran out of home brew.![]()
and I can keg the batch in the fermenter.
So how many days does it take to go from seeds to malt ready to use?well i've noticed a few other maltsters here recently, so maybe this is become more relevant...i just spread out my barley sprouts for what i hope to be brew day, day after tomorrow. work schedule permiting.
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you can tell from the picture and the contrast between dry and wet spot how effective just a box fan is at drying sprouts. that's only been going for about an hour!
So how many days does it take to go from seeds to malt ready to use?
Absolutely, I use Hot PBW (alkaline) first, then after you are done soaking or using a pump to circulate the PBW I use the same temp Hot water to rinse the kegs (and fermenters for that matter). Then after the Hot rinse I usually spray Star San inside the walls of the keg (or fermenter), this is the acid rinse. Then leave the Star San as this will dry (on the keg or fermenter walls) and or collect in the bottom of the keg. You can store it that way until you need the keg for next time. I do sanitize the keg (and fermenter) right before I need to use them again.
Doing this with both Hot PBW and the Hot water rinse will really help to ward off beer stone. You may see a rainbow type of streak marks on your stainless kegs or fermenters. This process will eliminate that. I had spoken to a rep at Five Star a long time ago and this is what they told me to do. It really works. If you have beer stone already you can buy their beer stone remover and use that as well, and then do this regime when you clean and it will keep it at bay. Hope this helps.
John
brewed up the grodziskie. Very curious how that will come out...
Thank you very much for taking the time and providing an excellent explanation!
It's also a very timely response because I have been reducing my Star San use in my kegs and fermenters due to the introduction of a bucket washer I built late last year. Beerstone is a constant battle in my kettle, but I've always wondered why I've never had that issue in my kegs and fermenters. Your post clears that up. I've always alternated between Iodophor and Star San in both vessels. It seems the Star San has been keeping my kegs and fermenters free of beerstone without my knowledge.
Based upon your post, it sounds like I can get by with a Ball jar of Star San dedicated to the acid rinse step? Simply dump the jar into the vessel, give it a shake, wait five minutes, give it another shake (just to be certain) then pour the Star San back into the jar for later use?
I can get with that!
Thanks for the big morale boost in the war against beerstone! I'll certainly start deploying Star San on the kettle front.
Ha, not sure what I'm being brave about, but I'll take the complimentYou're a braver brewer than I'll ever be!
I tip my hat to you, sir.
Our meetings average 8-12 people depending; don't think we've hit 30 as long as I've been in the club. I'm the new president, so increasing participation has crossed my mind, and I try to "recruit" homebrewers I meet in the wild, and have a sign up at the brewery where we hold our meetings. But I think I like the level we're at. Keeps it where everyone feels they can participate and aren't just going to a beer class or something.Last night I went to a homebrew club meeting in Billings. I hadn’t been to one in over a year. The last one I attended there were 30+ people there. Last night there were 8. They talked about all the things they would do if they could just get more folks to participate. Nobody had any suggestions for increasing participation. The current prez has sold most of his gear and is living with his in-laws while building a new house. But, it would sure be nice if we could…
Today I pulled a sample of the Altbier I brewed on 4/09. It’s probably done so I moved the fermenter into the crawl space, where it’s about 50°, until we come back the first part of May.
Billings has a metro area population of around 200K and supports 10 brewpubs/taprooms, one dedicated LHBS (observing it’s 30th anniversary this year) and an Ace hardware that has a pretty lame homebrew department. A second HBS/brew on premesis place didn’t last a year. Maybe the current membership constitutes “peak homebrew”.Our meetings average 8-12 people depending; don't think we've hit 30 as long as I've been in the club. I'm the new president, so increasing participation has crossed my mind, and I try to "recruit" homebrewers I meet in the wild, and have a sign up at the brewery where we hold our meetings. But I think I like the level we're at. Keeps it where everyone feels they can participate and aren't just going to a beer class or something.