Bilsch
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LODO on the hot side...
After doing that for a while, you determined it wasn't worth the effort and decided to give it up?
LODO on the hot side...
I recently went from 10 gallon batches to 15 gallon and I was already making 4L starters. Getting a flask larger than 5L seems impractical, so I've continued just making 4L starters. I'm probably still overdoing it for the beers I make, mostly around 6%abv.I agree with pitch rates. It probably is quite important and I'm a tool, but those yeast seem to be a lot more capable, hardy buggers than we give them credit for.
With that said, I'll probably continue to make starters, but I'm going to glop some DME into a pot, cook it, pitch my yeast and say "close enough" .
Oh shoot, that was a lager...
After doing that for a while, you determined it wasn't worth the effort and decided to give it up?
That wasn't the question...
"What would you give up, but feel you’d still be able to make good beer?"
Does this count, regarding to the topic?
Then I could say "I missed by OG by 1 point", beer still tasted good. I believe OP is more after process than vital data targets.
I agree with this as well. Once the starches/sugars have been converted and in solution/suspension theres is really no reason to continue with heated water. Its just a rinse.I'll agree here. Too many people caught up in chasing the ever elusive efficiency point. I'd rather have repeatable low efficiency that random high efficiency.
If I had to have one thing in my process to give up or stop caring about, it might be sparge water temp. Not sure it matters if you use 170 degree water or straight tap water. I helped a friend brew who didn't have nearly the gear to fly sparge with, but he wanted to. I basically just stretched a water hose over his mash tun and let it trickle in. It worked and the beer was good.
lol, I dont open a beer until Im done. after all, I spend a consistent 6 hrs brew day, by then and Ive dumped and cleaned up my equipment, I have surely deserved one.As I have been brewing for several years I often skip at least one so called essential step every brew.
#1. Making a yeast starter. This used to be an essential step but recently I've been getting yeast that's only a few weeks old. However if I get a yeast shipped to me then I typically use a starter.
#2. Cold crash. Me and the people who drink my beer could care less about clarity. The only cold crash i do is after I keg. Now if it's for a competition or I want it clear then I typically use whirlfloc along with a cold crash.
#3. Sparge temp. I will always heat my batch sparge water but if it's 140F or 180F I don't give a flying goose.
#4. Fermentation temperature. I always stay withing guidelines and typically on the low side but I've had temps go out of control and all was good.
#5. Having to drink on brew day. Sometimes this step was the key failure in my beers. Getting blitzed before the boil typically leads to unnecessary headbanging (I listen to metal on brew day) and missed hop additions and key steps. Now don't open a beer until the boil.
Mmmm, I could actually argue this to a small point. I usually just simmer the boil like you say. But, I have found that if I roll the boil at the end ,(10 minutes?) the hop particles are boiled up onto the sides of the kettle which leaves less in suspension or settled in the kettle to get drawn into the transfer to the FV.Intensity of the boil. Really doesn’t seem to matter. Low simmer is fine, no need for hard rolling boil.
the whirlfloc tablet.Hi all!
I always like reading about brewing and different techniques/ ideas.
I had a question for the HB Forum crowd.
If you had to give up control of one (only one) aspect of the brewing process, what would it be?
ie: ability to control the quality and pH of your water [emoji97]? The ability to control the temperature of your fermentation? The ability to whirlpool or sparge? The ability to control the temp or your mash?
What would you give up, but feel you’d still be able to make good beer?
Interested in what people find least or, conversely, most important in their brewing process.
Sanitizing the mash or boil equipment! When I started brewing I spent so much time scrubbing everything with starsan.
I think you are supposed to scrub before the starsan.Sanitizing the mash or boil equipment! When I started brewing I spent so much time scrubbing everything with starsan.
I agree with pitch rates. It probably is quite important and I'm a tool, but those yeast seem to be a lot more capable, hardy buggers than we give them credit for.
With that said, I'll probably continue to make starters, but I'm going to glop some DME into a pot, cook it, pitch my yeast and say "close enough" .
Oh shoot, that was a lager...
I propose pitching fresh yeast is another angle to consider rather than pitch rate. Why I can’t say for certain. Anyone?
So does any process matter anymore? Can we just whiz into a moldy bucket of grain, filter it through dirty underwear, ferment with pond scum in the back of the junk car in the yard and get good beer? RDWHAHB