Please tell me you swept it up and called it Swept Under the Rug {beer style of your choice}???
Besides, if you mashed and boiled it you're all good, right?
Please tell me you swept it up and called it Swept Under the Rug {beer style of your choice}???
Please tell me you swept it up and called it Swept Under the Rug {beer style of your choice}???
I did a super stupid one the other day. Measured out the dry hops for my pliny clone (I keep my hops in a chest freezer in the garage, and use the top as a table for the scale) dropped them in the fermenter, and went my merry way. This was Wednesday. Yesterday afternoon, sitting in my garage having a few homebrews, and happened to glance in the direction of the freezer...yep, three different bags of hops sitting ON TOP of the freezer instead of in it. Forgot to put them away. They're all completely dry and kept tightly closed, so I don't think they'll have a problem...but still. Noob moment.
Nope you're not. I've got a couple of lovely burn scars on my stomach from the hose coming loose from the pump while setting up the IC as a heat exchanger...it did the typical "fire hose" dance and most of it landed on my stomach and my left ****. And the other day I lost all my left forearm hair lighting a burner.
I was chilling my wort, reflecting on the successful brew day. I look over and see a bag of extract. I DON'T HAVE ANY LEFTOVER EXTRACT, I NEVER ADDED IT! So I panicked, threw in the extract into the cooling wort (looked like pancake mix) The fermentation took off like a rocket and the beer turned out ok.
I usually brew outdoors under a canopy in the summer because of afternoon Florida rain but this one particular day, it just looked so nice ...
Naturally, the clouds rolled in fast during the boil and the sky just opened up in an apocalyptic, torrential downpour forcing me to seek shelter while about a gallon of rainwater was added to my boiling wort. Once the rain stopped, I boiled it down to where I normally would and my American farmhouse ale still turned out great!
I usually brew outdoors under a canopy in the summer because of afternoon Florida rain but this one particular day, it just looked so nice ...
Naturally, the clouds rolled in fast during the boil and the sky just opened up in an apocalyptic, torrential downpour forcing me to seek shelter while about a gallon of rainwater was added to my boiling wort. Once the rain stopped, I boiled it down to where I normally would and my American farmhouse ale still turned out great!