Ok here goes!
Second brew was this:
https://www.beerhawk.co.uk/bourbon-barrel-porter-1-gallon-recipe-kit
I steeped the grains for 10 minutes and then removed them and brought the liquid to a boil. Now for my first recipe the Malt was in a liquid form (or sorts, very thick) and I added it no issue. This time I had a pound of dark malt and a pound of light (recipe said to just use half of the light malt). I started to add the dark malt and all off a sudden "whoosh" the boil exploded over the top of the kettle and went everywhere! The recipe didn't mention anything about this, just said to add to the boil, so this took me a bit by suprise! I am not sure how much liquid I lost but it was a fair bit I think. Even on a soft boil I couldn't add the malt without it threatening to go over the top of the kettle, so I had to take it off the boil to add the malt and the first round of hops, stirred until it dissolved and then got it back on the boil.
35 minutes like that, then I added the second batch of hops (no explosion this time!) and after 45 minutes the boil was done. No other drama's at this point.
I used my shiny new thermometer to then cool the boil down to 65 F (it said between 60 and 70 was ideal) and then proceded to get the boil into my Bubbler via a funnel I had got that very conveniently sat on the top of the Bubble (luck, not judgement that one). With that done I then proceeded to try the Hydrometer. I had read the instructions, twice, but somehow missed the bit about needing to get some of the boil into a testing vessel. Oops. I only realised my error after trying to get the Hydrometer to give a reading from inside the Bubbler (I had at least sanitized it!) but I don't think there was enough liquid to go high enough up the ting, so no reading. I had nothing suitable sanitised at this point and coupled with the overflow earlier the kitchen was in a right state and my brain froze so I just added half a packet of yeast and closed the Bubbler off (putting some sanitises liquid in the airlock thing first).
So, it didn't go well again! This is what I ended up with (if this image upload works):
It's a One US gallon boil (you start with 1.25 gallons of water), so I should have closer to four litres in there (think the photo has uploaded small, so it is just below the three litre mark I have made), which I guess is down to the explosion when I added the malt? I was watching the boil throughout and it wasn't excessive, so I don't think it is a case of more liquid evaporating in the kettle than there should be, but I could be wrong.
It's in the larder now, but once again I don't have a gravity reading, so I will have to watch it like a hawk I guess. Or try and forget about it for a few days and then open the door and hope!
So I have a few questions that I hope you experienced types can help me with:
1. Was that reaction with the malt powder normal? If so do I need to actually add it before the liquid starts to boil in future?
2. If I am just tipping from Kettle to FV via a funnel, how do I get a sample for the Hydrometer and what vessel should I use/avoid?
3. Once I saw I was short on liquid in the FV, could/should I have topped it up with water from the tap?
4. I just added the yeast as per the recipe's instructions, should I have stirred it in, or will it just spread naturally over the next few days?
5. As part of the "Bourbon" part, the recipe states the below:
so I have a packet of Oak Cubes that came with the kit. If, as per the recipe, it says two weeks from boil to bottling, is it telling me to add the soaked cubes in one week's time? Do I just drop them in if so? I have had Bourbon Porter's before but have no idea what would be a good but not crazy expensive Bourbon to use either (really should have thought that one through!)?
Anything else I could/should have done? I am sure I have missed a question but these is all I had time to write down in between cleaning the kitchen and swearing (softly as this was all done whilst the Toddler was taking his nap!)
Thanking you in advance!