I bought a second Kettle (tank) from ebay. It is handy because it has thin sides and heats faster than my original tank. My original is 30 litres and this was sold as 30 litres. Mine could be bigger than I thought, the new one could be smaller. Or perhaps they are the same and that isn't the issue.
I have a recipe I enjoyed from my first brew; 1 KG oats, 4KG malted barley. Last time I added gluco amylase to make a really dry beer. This time I left it out, and added 50g of Kent Hop Goldings in the last 15 minutes of the boil. I use US-05 yeast.
This was my process
1. Leave the 22 or so litres of water in the kettle tank overnight to allow any chlorine to evaporate
2. Sanatise everything necessary with no rinse sanitiser
3. Put the oats and malted barley in a bag in the kettle and start to heat the tank
4. Keep the heat at 64C for one hour. It crept up to as much as 67, and down to 63. Stir every so often. No clumps found.
5. I put a grill over the kellte tank, with the oats-barley filled bag, and sparge boiled water through and squeeze some of the "juice" out.
6. I put a lid on the tank to get it to boil, ten minutes of boiling, then lid off and 96c (max I can get) for about an hour.
7. Last 15 minutes I added kent goldings hops (50mg) in a bag
8. Cool the mix down to 25c with my wart chiller
9. Use a sterile electric whisk to introduce air into the mix, with some stirring with a sterile metal paddle.
10. Measure with a hydrometer - reading 1.034 - I think this is a low result? I read it accurately and checked several times.
11. Open the spout in the kettle and eject the liquid into the sterile fermentation tank
12. Pitch the hydrated yeast. I dropped some of my US-05. So I ended up using 1 + 2/3 10g packets. Ideally I would have used one packet.
In the new kettle there is a wire mesh leading into the tap. It filters out a lot of ****. I ended up leaving about 300ml-600ml of sludge in the tank. Was that a mistake?
I think I got only 16 litres out of the process.
I may have screwed up with the sparging. The previous time I did it for a far longer time and far more carefully. Perhaps I extracted a lot more of the sugars?
The previous time I believe I did everything at a higher temperature.
Where do I go from here? I was thinking of boiling 4 litres of water, letting it cool, adding some appropriate quantity of maple syrup and putting this in the mix, and then seeing what the new gravity is.
I have a recipe I enjoyed from my first brew; 1 KG oats, 4KG malted barley. Last time I added gluco amylase to make a really dry beer. This time I left it out, and added 50g of Kent Hop Goldings in the last 15 minutes of the boil. I use US-05 yeast.
This was my process
1. Leave the 22 or so litres of water in the kettle tank overnight to allow any chlorine to evaporate
2. Sanatise everything necessary with no rinse sanitiser
3. Put the oats and malted barley in a bag in the kettle and start to heat the tank
4. Keep the heat at 64C for one hour. It crept up to as much as 67, and down to 63. Stir every so often. No clumps found.
5. I put a grill over the kellte tank, with the oats-barley filled bag, and sparge boiled water through and squeeze some of the "juice" out.
6. I put a lid on the tank to get it to boil, ten minutes of boiling, then lid off and 96c (max I can get) for about an hour.
7. Last 15 minutes I added kent goldings hops (50mg) in a bag
8. Cool the mix down to 25c with my wart chiller
9. Use a sterile electric whisk to introduce air into the mix, with some stirring with a sterile metal paddle.
10. Measure with a hydrometer - reading 1.034 - I think this is a low result? I read it accurately and checked several times.
11. Open the spout in the kettle and eject the liquid into the sterile fermentation tank
12. Pitch the hydrated yeast. I dropped some of my US-05. So I ended up using 1 + 2/3 10g packets. Ideally I would have used one packet.
In the new kettle there is a wire mesh leading into the tap. It filters out a lot of ****. I ended up leaving about 300ml-600ml of sludge in the tank. Was that a mistake?
I think I got only 16 litres out of the process.
I may have screwed up with the sparging. The previous time I did it for a far longer time and far more carefully. Perhaps I extracted a lot more of the sugars?
The previous time I believe I did everything at a higher temperature.
Where do I go from here? I was thinking of boiling 4 litres of water, letting it cool, adding some appropriate quantity of maple syrup and putting this in the mix, and then seeing what the new gravity is.