Fred777
New Member
Hi guys, I'm new here.
On Saturday, we (my dear wife and myself) made our first all grain brew attempt, a smoked porter bases on a recipe in The Homebrew Handbook (Dave Law and Beshlie Grimes). I just read through Waylander87's first all grain brew attempt and I had similar feelings, haha.
First of all, we started in the afternoon, not knowing that it would take us until 10 in the evening until we'd pitch the yeast.
The recipe called for 23 litres of water, and in our blind lack of experience, we believed that was the only amount of water we should use. This is how it went:
MASHING
We boiled 10 liters of water to put in the mash tun for 20 minutes in order to get it hot. The water was then run out of the tun, and we added 10 liters of water at 72 degrees. We then slowly added +/- 5 kg of grains to the water and aimed at a sparge temperature of 67/68 degrees.
After 1h30, the temperature was still around 66 degrees, so all good!
SPARGING
Now here's where the trouble started. We had about 13 litter of water left to sparge according to what we understood from the recipe (23 litres - 10 litres in the mash tun), so we slowly started sparging that (a combination of batch and fly sparging, another failure we had) at 80 degrees.
That took forever and I'm quite sure that next time we'll just go for batch sparging, it seems to make more sense and it looks a lot easier. Anyway, I though the level of wort in the boiler was quite low, but having nothing to measure how much was actually in there, I just guessed; 23 litres in = 23 litres out...
BOILING
So the boiler went on the hob and we started boiling it. I followed the recipe with the hops, however I just checked the hops loose in the boiler. I think next time I'll put them in a bag. When we were emptying the boiler in the fermenter, all the hop residue was around the hop strainer at the bottom and it created a mess and not all the liquid went through.
COOLING
I wish someone had told me that cooling takes ages. We have one of these spiral coolers that you put in the boiler, but even with that it took ages. We ended up putting it in a cold bathtub so that the cooling was accelerated.
FERMENTER
After the temperature dropped enough, we transferred it to the fermenter, which has a volume indication, only to discover that we only had 12 litres of wort from our initial 23 litres of water...
Original gravity was 1083 (the recipe predicted 1056) which makes sense since we have less liquid.
My main concern is not that our beer will have a high ABV (duh), I'm more concerned about the fact that we hopped the beer for a 23 litre brew whilst there was only 12 litres in there. This might end up being very bitter...
The beer's been in the fermenter since Saturday night now, it's Monday morning and the activity is very low (not a lot of noise in my airlock). Again here, we added yeast worth of a 23 litre brew, and we also added it when the brew was still 25 degrees...
I wonder how this will end up... I think there are some lessons to be learned here, and I think we should do the same brew all over, but do it right this time.
Thanks for your feedback!
On Saturday, we (my dear wife and myself) made our first all grain brew attempt, a smoked porter bases on a recipe in The Homebrew Handbook (Dave Law and Beshlie Grimes). I just read through Waylander87's first all grain brew attempt and I had similar feelings, haha.
First of all, we started in the afternoon, not knowing that it would take us until 10 in the evening until we'd pitch the yeast.
The recipe called for 23 litres of water, and in our blind lack of experience, we believed that was the only amount of water we should use. This is how it went:
MASHING
We boiled 10 liters of water to put in the mash tun for 20 minutes in order to get it hot. The water was then run out of the tun, and we added 10 liters of water at 72 degrees. We then slowly added +/- 5 kg of grains to the water and aimed at a sparge temperature of 67/68 degrees.
After 1h30, the temperature was still around 66 degrees, so all good!
SPARGING
Now here's where the trouble started. We had about 13 litter of water left to sparge according to what we understood from the recipe (23 litres - 10 litres in the mash tun), so we slowly started sparging that (a combination of batch and fly sparging, another failure we had) at 80 degrees.
That took forever and I'm quite sure that next time we'll just go for batch sparging, it seems to make more sense and it looks a lot easier. Anyway, I though the level of wort in the boiler was quite low, but having nothing to measure how much was actually in there, I just guessed; 23 litres in = 23 litres out...
BOILING
So the boiler went on the hob and we started boiling it. I followed the recipe with the hops, however I just checked the hops loose in the boiler. I think next time I'll put them in a bag. When we were emptying the boiler in the fermenter, all the hop residue was around the hop strainer at the bottom and it created a mess and not all the liquid went through.
COOLING
I wish someone had told me that cooling takes ages. We have one of these spiral coolers that you put in the boiler, but even with that it took ages. We ended up putting it in a cold bathtub so that the cooling was accelerated.
FERMENTER
After the temperature dropped enough, we transferred it to the fermenter, which has a volume indication, only to discover that we only had 12 litres of wort from our initial 23 litres of water...
Original gravity was 1083 (the recipe predicted 1056) which makes sense since we have less liquid.
My main concern is not that our beer will have a high ABV (duh), I'm more concerned about the fact that we hopped the beer for a 23 litre brew whilst there was only 12 litres in there. This might end up being very bitter...
The beer's been in the fermenter since Saturday night now, it's Monday morning and the activity is very low (not a lot of noise in my airlock). Again here, we added yeast worth of a 23 litre brew, and we also added it when the brew was still 25 degrees...
I wonder how this will end up... I think there are some lessons to be learned here, and I think we should do the same brew all over, but do it right this time.
Thanks for your feedback!