Dulwich North
Active Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2020
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I am trying to scale down a recipe for my 11L pan and just need a bit of guidance about "liquor" and "makes" volumes. Maybe I have understood, or maybe I need pointing in the right direction....
Since it's a popular book, I'll say that I am scaling down the Belgian Tripel recipe in the 2019 edition of Greg Hughes Home Brew Beer. I see that it makes 23 litres, I6.3 litres is shown as the mash liquor and 27 litres for the boil liquor. So what I think I understand is that after mashing with 16.3L, I would use up to 10.7L sparging water to get up to the 27L to begin boiling. Right so far?
In my 7 brews to date, I am seeing about a third of the volume being lost in boiling - I'm doing 60 mins in an open pan. So that 27L would head down to 18L, well short of the 23L that the recipe makes. So at this stage would I just be making up the difference with boiled water or topping up the fermentation vessel. I must be missing something here!
Since it's a popular book, I'll say that I am scaling down the Belgian Tripel recipe in the 2019 edition of Greg Hughes Home Brew Beer. I see that it makes 23 litres, I6.3 litres is shown as the mash liquor and 27 litres for the boil liquor. So what I think I understand is that after mashing with 16.3L, I would use up to 10.7L sparging water to get up to the 27L to begin boiling. Right so far?
In my 7 brews to date, I am seeing about a third of the volume being lost in boiling - I'm doing 60 mins in an open pan. So that 27L would head down to 18L, well short of the 23L that the recipe makes. So at this stage would I just be making up the difference with boiled water or topping up the fermentation vessel. I must be missing something here!