photek1000
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2013
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I have moved through kits, partial extract and stove top 1 Gallon All Grain brewing but hadn't brewed anything for a while, but Christmas brought me 2 x full All Grain recipe kits.
This will be a bit of a record for me, so quite a basic write up :thumb:
Today was Brew day after buying my boiler and chiller, I had planned and planned, scheduled and planned a bit more in my head, all seemed to go well, maybe the planning, but definitely a written schedule to follow was well worth it, by the end of the day I was 20 minutes out and I'll put that down to a sub zero outdoor temperature.
Todays recipe was a Timothy Taylor Landlord Clone, aiming for 23 litres and OG of 1.048 following the notes.
Day started after the school run, bringing 22 litres up to Mashing temp, the insulation on the Peco seemed to help well in the freezing temperatures.
Grain and Hops for the day, 5.3KG of Marris Otter, 47g of Bobek & 20g of East Kent Goldings
Adding the grain was easy enough, plenty of space in the boiler even with the false bottom fitted, didn't seem to get any dough balls, sealed it up and watched the temperature, it dropped to around 68-69c and seemed to hold nicely, didn't need to re-apply any heat over the 90 minute mash.
Towards the end of the mash, heated 10 litres in my old stove top kettle to sparge with, moving the grain bag to my bottling bucket to rinse the grains.
Topped up the boiler with the sparged liquid and brought it to the boil.
Rolling boil was good with the Peco, plenty of head space for the break and held a good vigorous boil, had a funny on off type flow to the boil at the end but it never cut to a level that made a difference.
Hops added at 60 and 15, with a protofloc tablet in the last 10, plus my shiny new chiller.
All chilled down in about 25 minutes and in the FV, with some issues, but done, at temp and pre-rehydrated yeast pitched, then all cosied up in the garage with insulation then my brew belt, then my brewing curtain, lol.
So that was brew day, things I learnt was,
So in the end I have 20 litres at an OG of 1.044 so I am pretty happy for my first proper BIAB session, hopefully it will taste alright as well.
A question though about the protofloc, does it need to be crushed and is one tablet too much for 20 - 23litres.
I'm sure many more question will arise on my way deeper into AG brewing.
This will be a bit of a record for me, so quite a basic write up :thumb:
Today was Brew day after buying my boiler and chiller, I had planned and planned, scheduled and planned a bit more in my head, all seemed to go well, maybe the planning, but definitely a written schedule to follow was well worth it, by the end of the day I was 20 minutes out and I'll put that down to a sub zero outdoor temperature.
Todays recipe was a Timothy Taylor Landlord Clone, aiming for 23 litres and OG of 1.048 following the notes.
Day started after the school run, bringing 22 litres up to Mashing temp, the insulation on the Peco seemed to help well in the freezing temperatures.
Grain and Hops for the day, 5.3KG of Marris Otter, 47g of Bobek & 20g of East Kent Goldings
Adding the grain was easy enough, plenty of space in the boiler even with the false bottom fitted, didn't seem to get any dough balls, sealed it up and watched the temperature, it dropped to around 68-69c and seemed to hold nicely, didn't need to re-apply any heat over the 90 minute mash.
Towards the end of the mash, heated 10 litres in my old stove top kettle to sparge with, moving the grain bag to my bottling bucket to rinse the grains.
Topped up the boiler with the sparged liquid and brought it to the boil.
Rolling boil was good with the Peco, plenty of head space for the break and held a good vigorous boil, had a funny on off type flow to the boil at the end but it never cut to a level that made a difference.
Hops added at 60 and 15, with a protofloc tablet in the last 10, plus my shiny new chiller.
All chilled down in about 25 minutes and in the FV, with some issues, but done, at temp and pre-rehydrated yeast pitched, then all cosied up in the garage with insulation then my brew belt, then my brewing curtain, lol.
So that was brew day, things I learnt was,
- The PECO is big enough for a 23l brew
- The false bottom isn't worth it and clogs, ruining tap flow
- The PECO tap is utter rubbish
- I need to work out all my dead space, I ended up with a 20 litre FV
So in the end I have 20 litres at an OG of 1.044 so I am pretty happy for my first proper BIAB session, hopefully it will taste alright as well.
A question though about the protofloc, does it need to be crushed and is one tablet too much for 20 - 23litres.
I'm sure many more question will arise on my way deeper into AG brewing.