garymscott
Active Member
Punk IPA attempt number 1
So I finally secured a free day to try the Brew Dog Punk IPA recipe I downloaded from the Brew Dog site: https://www.brewdog.com/diydog. I decided on the 2007 version instead of their current recipe as it uses fewer hops and only one type of malt plus doesn't require dry-hopping (trying to cut down on the number of variables at the moment after my previous disasterous AG attempts).
To avoid the chemically tasting brews that have resulted from my previous AG brew days I only sanitised with Brew Safe (a no rinse sanitiser) and avoided using VWP this time.
I've also heavily insulated my mash tun to help retain a steady temperature. I think I may have gone a little overboard as now it requires a little effort to move the handle over the lid.
So here's how the day went...
The mash:
Heated liquor (32L of ASDA Eden Falls Mineral Water) to 77ðC-80ðC the added 5L + 2kg of grains at a time to mash tun.
I had to add some bottled water (around 1L) to lower the mash temp. The target mash temp is 65ðC. For the first 20 mins it was 66ðC so I kept the lid off. I then decided it wasn't dropping so I restarted the thermometer and it said 64ðC. I closed the lid and after a few more minutes it dropped to 63ðC. I added some more liquor and it remained at 65ðC for the rest of the mash.
As I went out into the garden I found the manifold for the mash tun lying where I'd left it after rinsing it. As you can imagine, this was disappointing . After a good panic I put on some rubber gloves and fitted the manifold into place and unblocked the pipe through the tap with a metal skewer and everything was fine again. I'm just hoping my brew won't taste like rubber gloves....
I recirculated the wort in the mash tun (probably about 3L), however it never really ran that clear so not sure why or whether this is going to cause any problems?
Another issue I had during the mash is my digital thermometer packed up. It now reads anywhere between 80ðC - 100ðC no matter what the temperature of the probe is. I'll be sending that one back to Amazon!
The boil:
The burco boiler seems to take an age to start boiling the wort so I keep it covered until it starts to boil. I've also tried adding some insulation this time which seem to help slightly. Hop additions were all fine and I also added a protofloc tablet 15 mins before the end. The SG was 1.054, which just short of the target of 1.056.
Chilling:
The chiller seemed to work fine although I didn't have a thermometer (except a digital infrared one which only measures the surface temp) so relied on guesswork as to when it had cooled sufficiently.
Fermenter:
Once it was in the fermenter I could see that the boil had reduced the wort too much as I only had 18L from the original 25L instead of 20L.
There's not much to say after this as I just added the yeast and set the temperature to maintain 19ðC.
Fingers crossed this one will go ok although the recipe doesn't state how much priming sugar to add when it's time to bottle. Greg Hughes' table in the book "Home Brew Beer" recommends 4.5g of cane sugar per litre for IPAs so I guess I'll go with that.
So I finally secured a free day to try the Brew Dog Punk IPA recipe I downloaded from the Brew Dog site: https://www.brewdog.com/diydog. I decided on the 2007 version instead of their current recipe as it uses fewer hops and only one type of malt plus doesn't require dry-hopping (trying to cut down on the number of variables at the moment after my previous disasterous AG attempts).
To avoid the chemically tasting brews that have resulted from my previous AG brew days I only sanitised with Brew Safe (a no rinse sanitiser) and avoided using VWP this time.
I've also heavily insulated my mash tun to help retain a steady temperature. I think I may have gone a little overboard as now it requires a little effort to move the handle over the lid.
So here's how the day went...
The mash:
Heated liquor (32L of ASDA Eden Falls Mineral Water) to 77ðC-80ðC the added 5L + 2kg of grains at a time to mash tun.
I had to add some bottled water (around 1L) to lower the mash temp. The target mash temp is 65ðC. For the first 20 mins it was 66ðC so I kept the lid off. I then decided it wasn't dropping so I restarted the thermometer and it said 64ðC. I closed the lid and after a few more minutes it dropped to 63ðC. I added some more liquor and it remained at 65ðC for the rest of the mash.
As I went out into the garden I found the manifold for the mash tun lying where I'd left it after rinsing it. As you can imagine, this was disappointing . After a good panic I put on some rubber gloves and fitted the manifold into place and unblocked the pipe through the tap with a metal skewer and everything was fine again. I'm just hoping my brew won't taste like rubber gloves....
I recirculated the wort in the mash tun (probably about 3L), however it never really ran that clear so not sure why or whether this is going to cause any problems?
Another issue I had during the mash is my digital thermometer packed up. It now reads anywhere between 80ðC - 100ðC no matter what the temperature of the probe is. I'll be sending that one back to Amazon!
The boil:
The burco boiler seems to take an age to start boiling the wort so I keep it covered until it starts to boil. I've also tried adding some insulation this time which seem to help slightly. Hop additions were all fine and I also added a protofloc tablet 15 mins before the end. The SG was 1.054, which just short of the target of 1.056.
Chilling:
The chiller seemed to work fine although I didn't have a thermometer (except a digital infrared one which only measures the surface temp) so relied on guesswork as to when it had cooled sufficiently.
Fermenter:
Once it was in the fermenter I could see that the boil had reduced the wort too much as I only had 18L from the original 25L instead of 20L.
There's not much to say after this as I just added the yeast and set the temperature to maintain 19ðC.
Fingers crossed this one will go ok although the recipe doesn't state how much priming sugar to add when it's time to bottle. Greg Hughes' table in the book "Home Brew Beer" recommends 4.5g of cane sugar per litre for IPAs so I guess I'll go with that.