MickDundee
Landlord.
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2016
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I buy what I need for 4 or 5 specific recipes then a user-upper brew at the end.
Not at all I have tried a few computer based systems over the last 20 years but I find my pen and paper easier and quicker.Luddite
Are you freezing liquid yeast? What technique are you using? I've read that you can't just freeze liquid yeast, you need to add glycerol to prevent osmosis killing the yeast cells.I use Beersmith to keep track of my inventory, but the rub is that you have to make sure you hit the "remove inventory" button each time you brew. I keep hops, frozen yeast, and grain on hand. I don't bother tracking irish moss, brewing salts, gelatin, since I don't need to know those when I'm building a recipe.
The caution I noted was due to using my last vial of a strain of frozen yeast and then needing to buy a new pack to re-supply my bank.
Ingredients>Hops> Then double click on desired hop to bring up the edit box, there you can correct the AA% to what you have and also change the Inventory amount.I use BeerSmith (and occasionally double check in case I forget to remove a recipe from inventory!) but wish there was a way of saving %alpha of hops when I add them. I have to double check on the pack in the freezer when I add them to a recipe.
This is where software like Brewfather helps so much. As long as you remember to add your stock into the inventory, then when you brew it's automatically removed. I only have to sanity check mine because I know that sometimes I don't update the batch recipe with the exact amounts used, and the odd gram or two here can add upI wind myself up with this. I do a stock take of grains and hops and just keep it in the “note” section on my iPhone ready to update after each brew day. Then, after a few weeks, I realise I haven’t been updating it and don’t have enough of something on brew day and have to ad-lib. Then I do a stock take of my grains and hops.............
I use a solution of 30% glycerin, 70% water, sterilize it in a pressure canner, and then when I add the yeast slurry, I double the volume so that I have a 15% glycerin solution. I store about 16 ml in a 24 ml vial.Are you freezing liquid yeast? What technique are you using? I've read that you can't just freeze liquid yeast, you need to add glycerol to prevent osmosis killing the yeast cells.
when I have multiple hops with different alpha acids of the same variety, I just use the add a hop function, add that specific hop at the specific alpha acid, and put the amount that I have in inventory. That way it's unique to the recipes I'm using them in.Ah, thanks @Sadfield did not know that. Feels like a workaround changing the default values, there should be the ability to specify %alpha when adding to the inventory in its own tab. Useful if you have a number of batches of the same variety. Just nit picking tho!
Pen and Paper - Luxury!Pen and paper, worked well the last 40 odd years.
That's a lot of stock but was that your lockdown levels or normal?I use a calc printout like this, print out all the pages, put them in a file and just update them with a pen. I redo the sheet perhaps twice a year.
View attachment 33036
Even with delivery at £13 a load, it's still MUCH cheaper to buy grain and hops from Ireland or the UK than it is on the mainland. Nevertheless, I always top up to the full 30 Kilos with base malt, usually Crisp's or Minch pale malt.Im going to try to move to just having stuff in for the next 3 or 4 brews as stuff is taking up too much space. This is partly down to making up orders that are about say £15 below free delivery so throwing in an extra few 500gf bags of random speciality malts and hops you might or might not 'need'. Hence the need to track inventory
Im going to try to move to just having stuff in for the next 3 or 4 brews as stuff is taking up too much space. This is partly down to making up orders that are about say £15 below free delivery so throwing in an extra few 500gf bags of random speciality malts and hops you might or might not 'need'. Hence the need to track inventory
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