1928 Barclay Perkins IPA. 20L.
Bloody hell its February and I haven’t brewed yet this year! Day off on Monday so maybe I’ll do one then
I noticed the grain was really floury compared to what I’ve used before.
Going to brew an English pale on Thursday. I’ll see how that goes. Maybe keep the wort flow restricted at first, see if that helps.
AG#27. 8th on my Grainfather. Citra Amarillo pale ale. Process is tied down now, with smooth fast transitions, and all was finished before 13:30, cleanup & all. I prepare the grain and mash liquor the night before, set deferred heating for the morning, and mash-in within 5 minutes of waking up. Near freezing water from the tap helps speed up cooling; only used 10 gallon. Recently got a rotary composter into which I put my spent grain & hops, saving a trip to the tip. Although I've tied down the process, I'm still learning on the brewing/recipe side. Recent changes are to skip mash-out, sparge with cooler water (~55C) and add acid only to the mash; all in an effort to remove a sour astringent back note. My mash efficiency was 93%, brewhouse eff. at 80%. US-05; into fermentation fridge at 18C. 1.050 SG, aiming for just over 5% ABV. Whirlpooling seems like a waste of time when you have a hop basket.
I did a brew day today. Whilst the grain crush was good, not too fine, there was a lot of flour. I gave the bag a good shake to push most to the bottom and used a sieve to remove some flour. From a 7kg grain bill I removed 700g of flour. ...
Is that 200 IBU or something crazy like that? Have you brewed it before? Very interested.1928 Barclay Perkins IPA. 20L.
about to embark on a pineapple and mango beer but using cider yeast...
4ltr pineapple juice 4 litres mango juice, 2kg extra light dme. 500g dwe topped up to 20 litres and fermenting with MJ's cider yeast.
I feel a competition coming on....
I hope that you used the flour to make a couple of "Malt Loaves"!! If you didn't then you missed a real treat!
Here's a recipe for you for a loaf using half of the 700g of SIFTED malted flour:
Mix the above ingredients together (by machine or by hand) and add sufficient lukewarm water to form a dough.
- 350g malted flour
- 75g mixed sultanas and raisins
- 10g olive oil
- 40g sugar
- two teaspoonful of Allinsons dried baking yeast (*)
- pinch of salt
Knead the dough for 10 minutes and then set aside in a warm place to prove and grease the inside of a loaf-tin.
When the dough has doubled in size (about an hour) knead the dough again for a further ten minutes, shape it accordingly, place it into a loaf tin and allow it to prove for at least another hour. (Note: A stiff dough can be cut into pieces and baked in a flat sheet to make rolls.)
When the loaf is proved to +/- twice its volume bake in a pre-heated oven at 200*C for 20 minutes then turn and bake for a further 20 minutes or until the top goes dark brown.
Turn out on to a wire rack and allow to cool before cutting and eating - preferably with some butter! Delicious!
(*)
Alternatively, you can use a yeast started made from some trub! Properly washed yeast from trub tastes just fine in a loaf, but it probably isn't with the hassle unless (like me) you just love experimenting with things!
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