AndyBWood
Regular.
Evening All,
Sunday was a fairly eventful day; itâs the first time Iâve ever made an AG beer, the first time Iâve ever had a sauna in my kitchen and definitely the first time Iâve ever done these two things at the same time !
( note to self : hop scented steam rooms at the gym to encourage brewers to exercise ? Iâll run a business proposition past the bank managerâ¦â¦... )
I chose to conjure the Timothy Taylorâs Landlord recipe from Wheelerâs book. One of my favourite tipples and was always earmarked to be my first decent into the murky depths of the Dark Side.
So, for anyone along for the ride, this is how the day went.
HLT on with 36 litres or so of water with a pinch of sodium metabisulphate which Iâve read helps to eliminate chlorine flavours.
Then, the first outing of the newly built mash tun and the required amount of liquor added; this is were the fun started.
Was aiming for a strike temp of around 73 degrees which I hoped would give a mash temp kicking off at around 66 to 67 degrees. Also, I wanted to pre heat the tun as advised so I added the liquor at around 84 degrees which I thought would be enoughâ¦. None of it, temp plummeted into the low 60âs as the tun sucked the heat out of the water.
The process of removing cooler water and replacing with hotter then began an went on for a fair while. To be honest, it would have probably been quicker just to dump the liquor back into the HLT and start again.
It certainly has been cold and it was only 12 litres or so of water added to a 32.5 litre vessel. Next time around Iâll certainly kick off with hotter liquor and I feel with these quantities on a cold day something towards boiling point wouldnât go amiss.
Ok â finally got to 73 degrees and it was time for the grains and mash salts.
Bang â temp right down to low sixties as soon as added to the tun ! Had to then stir in a couple of litres of boiling liquor to get back up to temp. I finally settled on between 66 and 67 degrees for my starting point. Again, I think this drop was down to the cold grain and another learning point noted.
This extra liquor also resulted in soup as opposed to the porridge like consistency Iâve read about. Not sure, however, what this means in terms of the mashing process itself ?
Ok â lid on and a Vango 4 season sleeping bag for that little extraâ¦â¦ I decided on the one and a half hour mash that Wheeler recommends but believe this may not be strictly necessary ( when all the starch turns to sugar its done when its done ? )
An hour and half later, temp had dropped to about 64 degrees so I think I lost maybe 3 degrees or so. This is probably down to the headroom in the tun and Iâll design something to fill the airspace on top of the grain for AG2.
Next came the sparge; the words âpatienceâ and âsaintâ immediately spring to mindâ¦.. I went for a really slow sparge as recommended and used the tin-foil method for my first attempt.
This was really interesting, unexpected and at one point I thought wort and outside grid were going to become friendly. Basically, my runnings were down to 1.010 and I still had litres and litres of liquor remaining. First thoughts turned to complete under efficiency and Iâd got no where near what I wanted. Hey ho; first attempt and all so into the boiler, up to temp and hops added; what a divine smellâ¦..
Good rolling boil on the go :
Maybe too vigorous as I was losing litres of liquid to evaporation ( hence my comments surrounding the sauna ) Not sure of the wisdom of this but I kept topping-up with boiling water as the boil progressed as I didnât want the wort to become too concentrated.
Ok â 10 mins to go and last hops plus Irish Moss tablet hit the liquor.
Chiller gets in on the act too.....
Down to 20 odd degrees and the drop.
The moment of truth.......
Almost 1.070 !!! I've invoked a demon !!!
After a slight mishap and losing a litre or so to the bottom of the boiler I ended up with 17 litres or so of rocket fuel. A quick 'liquor back' calc followed and I settled on around 23+ litres of something a little less 'challenging'.
Not sure how this came about really; Looks like I managed to strip the sugar from the grain with a relatively small amount of liquorâ¦. Due to the very slow sparge perhaps ?
Sorry, no yeast shot but I used a Whitelabs Yorkshire Square liquid yeast that I had split into 6 a few weeks ago and grew a starter from one of the small bottles collected. Never used liquid before; this went off like a madman, thick krausen within 8 hrs. Superb !
So, AG1 all tucked up with my caffeine powered fermentation control unit; weâll now have to wait and seeâ¦â¦â¦
Just to close; a huge thank you for all the help and guidance provided by the members of this site. A great community and an enormous bank of knowledge and expertise.
Thanks again â canât wait to try this.
Cheers :thumb:
Sunday was a fairly eventful day; itâs the first time Iâve ever made an AG beer, the first time Iâve ever had a sauna in my kitchen and definitely the first time Iâve ever done these two things at the same time !
( note to self : hop scented steam rooms at the gym to encourage brewers to exercise ? Iâll run a business proposition past the bank managerâ¦â¦... )
I chose to conjure the Timothy Taylorâs Landlord recipe from Wheelerâs book. One of my favourite tipples and was always earmarked to be my first decent into the murky depths of the Dark Side.
So, for anyone along for the ride, this is how the day went.
HLT on with 36 litres or so of water with a pinch of sodium metabisulphate which Iâve read helps to eliminate chlorine flavours.

Then, the first outing of the newly built mash tun and the required amount of liquor added; this is were the fun started.

Was aiming for a strike temp of around 73 degrees which I hoped would give a mash temp kicking off at around 66 to 67 degrees. Also, I wanted to pre heat the tun as advised so I added the liquor at around 84 degrees which I thought would be enoughâ¦. None of it, temp plummeted into the low 60âs as the tun sucked the heat out of the water.
The process of removing cooler water and replacing with hotter then began an went on for a fair while. To be honest, it would have probably been quicker just to dump the liquor back into the HLT and start again.
It certainly has been cold and it was only 12 litres or so of water added to a 32.5 litre vessel. Next time around Iâll certainly kick off with hotter liquor and I feel with these quantities on a cold day something towards boiling point wouldnât go amiss.
Ok â finally got to 73 degrees and it was time for the grains and mash salts.

Bang â temp right down to low sixties as soon as added to the tun ! Had to then stir in a couple of litres of boiling liquor to get back up to temp. I finally settled on between 66 and 67 degrees for my starting point. Again, I think this drop was down to the cold grain and another learning point noted.

This extra liquor also resulted in soup as opposed to the porridge like consistency Iâve read about. Not sure, however, what this means in terms of the mashing process itself ?

Ok â lid on and a Vango 4 season sleeping bag for that little extraâ¦â¦ I decided on the one and a half hour mash that Wheeler recommends but believe this may not be strictly necessary ( when all the starch turns to sugar its done when its done ? )

An hour and half later, temp had dropped to about 64 degrees so I think I lost maybe 3 degrees or so. This is probably down to the headroom in the tun and Iâll design something to fill the airspace on top of the grain for AG2.

Next came the sparge; the words âpatienceâ and âsaintâ immediately spring to mindâ¦.. I went for a really slow sparge as recommended and used the tin-foil method for my first attempt.
This was really interesting, unexpected and at one point I thought wort and outside grid were going to become friendly. Basically, my runnings were down to 1.010 and I still had litres and litres of liquor remaining. First thoughts turned to complete under efficiency and Iâd got no where near what I wanted. Hey ho; first attempt and all so into the boiler, up to temp and hops added; what a divine smellâ¦..

Good rolling boil on the go :

Maybe too vigorous as I was losing litres of liquid to evaporation ( hence my comments surrounding the sauna ) Not sure of the wisdom of this but I kept topping-up with boiling water as the boil progressed as I didnât want the wort to become too concentrated.
Ok â 10 mins to go and last hops plus Irish Moss tablet hit the liquor.

Chiller gets in on the act too.....

Down to 20 odd degrees and the drop.

The moment of truth.......

Almost 1.070 !!! I've invoked a demon !!!
After a slight mishap and losing a litre or so to the bottom of the boiler I ended up with 17 litres or so of rocket fuel. A quick 'liquor back' calc followed and I settled on around 23+ litres of something a little less 'challenging'.
Not sure how this came about really; Looks like I managed to strip the sugar from the grain with a relatively small amount of liquorâ¦. Due to the very slow sparge perhaps ?
Sorry, no yeast shot but I used a Whitelabs Yorkshire Square liquid yeast that I had split into 6 a few weeks ago and grew a starter from one of the small bottles collected. Never used liquid before; this went off like a madman, thick krausen within 8 hrs. Superb !
So, AG1 all tucked up with my caffeine powered fermentation control unit; weâll now have to wait and seeâ¦â¦â¦

Just to close; a huge thank you for all the help and guidance provided by the members of this site. A great community and an enormous bank of knowledge and expertise.
Thanks again â canât wait to try this.
Cheers :thumb: