If my next brew didn't already have a name I'd gladly call it "What goes around, comes around" in acknowledgementMy turn to cheer on the yeast as it tries to escape!
Yeah, that's kinda what I'm thinking. It's fancy malted barley but it's still malted barley so I don't see why it should be radically different from regular Lager Malt, Maris Otter or Golden Promise. Main thing though, when I was scrubbing off the black burned stuff on the element I could really smell the burned tyre smell in the kettle but couldn't detect anything at all in the gravity sampleSounds good, I had the dreaded e4 for the first time in a while recently, think it was as a result of using the dregs of a bag of malt and there being more 'dust' than usual. I've never noticed any off taste in the wort from it though.
As long as I can resist! The thing with bottles is you can chuck a case in the shed and forget about them for months, but a keg will be taking up only one of 3 spaces in my kegerator so you kinda want to get on and drink it. And to give you some idea how long I'll likely resist for, I kegged my AG#86 Lagery Amber Lager last Monday and already had a little taste yesterday, y'know, just to check the carbonationHow long do you expect to condition this for?
I would say there was a suitable blend of calm "Ahh Houston, we have a problem" combined with an appropriate level of effing & jeffing! My main thought was a Helles is only really really lightly hopped, only 15-20 IBUs. Since the gravity ended up higher I didn't want to end up with something overly sweet so I knew I'd need to up it a bit to keep it balanced. In hindsight I'd have preferred 25-30 IBUs so I'm a touch over that, on paper at least - although the Magnum has been in the freezer about 2 years I think so probably lost a bit of it's potency. I'm sure it'll be fine thoughNice work on changing the style of brew though, I'd not have the presence of mind for that, I'd just swear
Well this is the really bizarre thing. Thinking about it, I probably shouldn't have put so much faith in my BG reading - I mean I measured it correctly & accurately at 20degC, corrected for zero error, all as normal etc etc etc. What I mean is when I've measured BG in the past I can never get it to tally with measured OG and pre/post boil wort volumes in Brewer's Friend so I generally don't bother because from experience I know I'll hit my OG usually dead on or maybe +/- 1-2 points out at worst.10 points over your pre-boil gravity is a heck of an overshoot on a small batch. What mash efficiency % does that work out as? If you fiddle with any of the recipe numbers (e.g. ppg) does it bring it in to line with what you actually got?
You do seem to boil off rather a lot as well compared to me, maybe due to a small batch boiling more vigorously? Everyone's system is different of course but I boil off a fairly predictable 3 litres (27 -> 24) adding 3 points-ish to the pre-boil gravity.
If you haven't listened to that Experimental Brewing episode yet then do, it's really interesting and useful. Also worth emailing Crisp for specific guidance - I got a response quickly from, as it turned out, one of the guys on the podcastAnyway, it's good to see the heritage malts being used. I've got 4kg of Chevalier waiting for me to pluck up the courage to use it. I hope yours ferments down to the expected FG. I'll be letting the Brewlab yeast loose on mine. Nothing can resist that sugar-munching monster.
I hadn't used 2308 before but yeah, this is exactly why I wanted to try it...Wyeast 2308 is a superb Helles yeast; so rich, malty and just classy. Looking at my records I've had attenuation of 83%, 85%, 86%, 85% from it. That and the Augustiner strain (2352) would be my choice yeasts for a Helles any day of the week.
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