Absolutely. Early Sunday morning, brewing in the dining room with the french doors open is glorious.I have a brew planned for Sunday, but the current hot weather (27°c for Sunday), is putting me off. I imagine it would be unbearable.
Do other folk still brew in this weather?
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E="dan125, post: 763035, member: 5926"]Yep, but chilling wort is a PITA at this time of year though. I try to start early so after I've given up with the immersion chiller, the wort can have a few hours in the fridge to get down the last few degrees before pitching the yeast in the evening.
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E="dan125, post: 763035, member: 5926"]Yep, but chilling wort is a PITA at this time of year though. I try to start early so after I've given up with the immersion chiller, the wort can have a few hours in the fridge to get down the last few degrees before pitching the yeast in the evening.
Not for me. I'm done with brewing until septembeer.
Too much trouble cooling or keeping a correct fermentation temperature.
Only botteling an (hopefully) imperial Rye stout tonight.
i use tesco ashbec, but i thought you still had to boil it first ( as less treated than tap water) ? if not then that is what i will do then
I would suspect it’s been under a UV lamp.i use tesco ashbec, but i thought you still had to boil it first ( as less treated than tap water) ? if not then that is what i will do then
Thats just what i was thinking. On saturday once the IC has got it down to about 30, i may just rack into FV and let the brew fridge do the rest. Then pitch a Couple of hours later. Is there any drawbacks to this method?
The alternative was liquor back with about 4 litres of super chilled frozen bottled water- not sure if there would be sanitation issues here though?
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