About yesterday and my first NEIPA attempt... well it was an interesting day, and a bit long.
Oh I had planned to be up bright and early, water on to heat nice and early before breakfast and be my super organised self... hmmm didn't quite work out like that. After the weekend requisite daughterly video calls to my Mum and then my Dad, thought I should call my brother for a catch up, oh and before I realised it was midday. Quickly measured out the salts for the water and weighed out the grain, checked the starter which had been chilling overnight to settle.. sheesh still looking v hazy.
Garage was freezing and the ground water 4 deg, so it took ages to heat up to strike temperature, and even though I'd reduced the target volume, getting the grain mix into the mash pipe took ages and I wondered if it would fit. First time making beer with rolled oats and it seems a bit odd but I guess we'll see. I was super chuffed that fairly quickly I had the temperatures top and bottom aligned and could start the mash proper.... it also meant I could retreat to the warmth of the kitchen. My daughter is finding it a bit funny just how involved I am and takes a photo of the kitchen for her friends saying it looks like a science lab!
Ok hops weighed out and first snag... one of them is whole leaf and takes up loads of space but it's ok since the supermarket veg bag can take it (I'd presoaked the bag in Chemsan), little did I know how this was going to come back and bite me. Solving the yeast starter problem... I used my wine thief pipette to suck up the top few millimetres at a time to remove the clearest part, reduced it down by about half and poured off about a quarter for use in future.
Gave the mash an extra 10 minute then lifted the mash pipe out to sparge, this really is at the limits of my strength to lift that full of grain, I think I'm going to have to look at some kind of pully
Preboil volumes look about right but it seems strange having no hops to add during the boil. Now the hop stand... never done this before other than approximate and I like being exact and neat... hops all ready... chill with the coil and woaahh way over shot with cooling, back on with the heating and Sabro in, and it smells just delicious - fruity tropical gorgeousness. Chill again and this time didn't overshoot, crikey that coil is chilling the wort fast! Into the snubnose and I'm feeling well pleased with myself.. oh pride before a fall.
Now I'd been really worried about how to attach the magnets and hop bag inside the fermenter and keep the inside sanitised, so I'd put on long nitrile gloves, held them in the sanitiser and thought that would mean any contact inside the fermenter would be fine. Tried to put the hop bag in the snubnose, while balancing the lid upside down on my knees, and half way through I realise it's far too big and is going to dangle in the wort
... ok right err... undo the knots in the bag and add a second magnet-why had I decided it needed about 10 knots to close it, and I have to take the gloves off to untie the bag, and now I've dropped the lid (at this stage if I hadn't been holding the hop bag, the dip pipe and a magnet - I'd have been stamping my little feet and getting really annoyed).
Finally managed to insert a second magnet elsewhere in the bag, secure it and it's fellow magnet on another part of the snubnose, spray the pipe and lid with chemsan, seal it up and ... oh frak... the yeast . Ok undo the lid, add the yeast and lift into the fermenting fridge - set for 21 deg. Bubbling and activity within 30min gosh that's quick! I just hope the sanitation breaches won't be a disaster. At the end of the day including cleaning, took 6.5 hours which is far too long. I was also shattered
. I'd promised the OH a nice dinner and planned on cooking pomme Anna (just because) along with some sea bass but it too ages so we ate really quite late.
Overall observations. Annoyed at the poor extract efficiency, OG 1.068 rather than 1.075 and I suspect the mash pH was a lot to do with it - 5.72 which is really a bit off target. I've not fiddled with the acidity of the water till now but I can see an order for phosphoric acid coming on. I'm also not going to use whole leaf hops for a dry hop like this in future. I'm aware that my fridge thermometer for the inkbird is in a bottle of sanitser not attached to the snubnose so it's probably fermenting warmer than intended, however doing so under pressure should compensate I hope. At present running at about 10psi, at dry hop I'll dial up to 15 psi or possibly a bit higher to try to keep the aroma in the FV as much as possible.
Anna