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- Dec 15, 2019
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Thought I'd write up my brewday - second all grain brew. This one is a weissbier, a copy of one from Jon Finch bought at the Malt Miller. Weissbier is my favourite style, thanks to my background (there's a reason I'm called Fritz!), so hope to try a few of these.
Grain Bill
2kg Crisp Pale Wheat Malt
2kg Crisp Maris Otter
130g Crisp Munich Malt
Hallertauer hops 25g at the start of the boil. Batch size was 19L.
Water
I decided to try following the advice from this very forum and try treating the water (so thanks to @strange-steve for a really helpful set of guides - I now have a shelf that looks like a weird chemist's!)
I did my tests and got an alkalinity of 166.47 ppm. I am using CRS/AMS to fiddle this, and I wanted to get the mash water and sparge water to around 20ppm. A reduction of 146.47 ppm gave me ~0.77 ml/L dose rate. Calcium test showed 90ppm, which is probably more than enough for a weissbier, but my local water report has a little more sulphate than chloride, and you don't really want to accentuate hops in a weissbier at all, so I added a little calcium chloride, about 0.1g/L. Also used some sodium metabisulphate to get rid of my chlorine.
Applied all three treatments to my mash and sparge, and hopefully that went well!
The mash / boil
I did three mash steps using my Grainfather:
This definitely had a good effect, and the wort went from a pale cloudy straw to a rich amber-brown over the course of the rest of the mash. I sparged, and let everything drain through. The boil went off fine - at the end it looked quite interesting, with lots of little pale clumps in suspension, that I had not seen before. I then ran it through the chiller into the fermenter - pitched some rehydrated Mangove Jack M20 and sealed up.
Results so far....
The gravity before I pitched was 1.044. This was a little lower than I'd hoped - I wonder if I either didn't sparge well enough, or if the slightly lower flow during the mash meant there wasn't enough conversion? Would be interested in anyone's thoughts. Maybe I should have used some rice hulls to break up the grain - is that effective?
As I mentioned in another thread, I woke up this morning and it was bubbling a fair old whack - I've got it down at 18 deg C now, and it is insanely bubbly on the airlock - about 2-3 bubbles per second. I'm a bit worried it is going far too fast, but I don't know what else to do but let it ride. Will update when I know more but any feedback welcome - I'm still learning and probably getting ahead of myself on a lot of this stuff.
Grain Bill
2kg Crisp Pale Wheat Malt
2kg Crisp Maris Otter
130g Crisp Munich Malt
Hallertauer hops 25g at the start of the boil. Batch size was 19L.
Water
I decided to try following the advice from this very forum and try treating the water (so thanks to @strange-steve for a really helpful set of guides - I now have a shelf that looks like a weird chemist's!)
I did my tests and got an alkalinity of 166.47 ppm. I am using CRS/AMS to fiddle this, and I wanted to get the mash water and sparge water to around 20ppm. A reduction of 146.47 ppm gave me ~0.77 ml/L dose rate. Calcium test showed 90ppm, which is probably more than enough for a weissbier, but my local water report has a little more sulphate than chloride, and you don't really want to accentuate hops in a weissbier at all, so I added a little calcium chloride, about 0.1g/L. Also used some sodium metabisulphate to get rid of my chlorine.
Applied all three treatments to my mash and sparge, and hopefully that went well!
The mash / boil
I did three mash steps using my Grainfather:
- 15 mins @ 45 deg C - this is something I'd read about as a 'ferulic acid' rest to try and extract the stuff that gives weissbier the precursor to the clove flavour that appears in the style
- 60 mins @ 65 deg C - normal one
- 10 mins @ 75 deg C - the mashout
This definitely had a good effect, and the wort went from a pale cloudy straw to a rich amber-brown over the course of the rest of the mash. I sparged, and let everything drain through. The boil went off fine - at the end it looked quite interesting, with lots of little pale clumps in suspension, that I had not seen before. I then ran it through the chiller into the fermenter - pitched some rehydrated Mangove Jack M20 and sealed up.
Results so far....
The gravity before I pitched was 1.044. This was a little lower than I'd hoped - I wonder if I either didn't sparge well enough, or if the slightly lower flow during the mash meant there wasn't enough conversion? Would be interested in anyone's thoughts. Maybe I should have used some rice hulls to break up the grain - is that effective?
As I mentioned in another thread, I woke up this morning and it was bubbling a fair old whack - I've got it down at 18 deg C now, and it is insanely bubbly on the airlock - about 2-3 bubbles per second. I'm a bit worried it is going far too fast, but I don't know what else to do but let it ride. Will update when I know more but any feedback welcome - I'm still learning and probably getting ahead of myself on a lot of this stuff.