Screams WCIPA, or dial everything back to a 6% beer.
Touch boil hops, rest whirlpool.
Touch boil hops, rest whirlpool.
AlaskanAg99 said:
Screams WCIPA, or dial everything back to a 6% beer.
Touch boil hops, rest whirlpool.
Chipotlemonger said:
Yea I would personally prefer a nice mid palate body to this.
It's funny how far away from Crystal that IPAs have gone.
Anyone know the malt bill for Sierra Nevada celebration? That is pretty dark stuff; but it isn't out of balance at all.
That's the pale ale, I meant the Celebration IPA that they do seasonally in the winter.AlaskanAg99 said:Chipotlemonger said:
Yea I would personally prefer a nice mid palate body to this.
It's funny how far away from Crystal that IPAs have gone.
Anyone know the malt bill for Sierra Nevada celebration? That is pretty dark stuff; but it isn't out of balance at all.
https://sierranevada.com/blog/pale-ale-homebrew-recipe/
My efficiency has been absolute **** lately. I will need to use enough 2-row by my calculations that it would bring the % Crystal 40L closer to 2.7%Ornlu said:
You can use all that crystal 40L if you want to, but prepare for a too-sweet finish. I mentioned earlier 2% crystal, which is 0.16 pounds in an 8lb, 5 gallon batch. 0.4 pounds is more like 5%. Personally I wouldn't do it; I would rather throw away the unused grain.
Ornlu said:
WAKE UP AGS! ITS BREW DAY!
Ornlu said:Ornlu said:
WAKE UP AGS! ITS BREW DAY!
Brew day went well, but how much sweat can you accidentally add to a Saison before it becomes a goze?
Ornlu said:
I didn't actually sweat INTO the beer, besides a few drops on my new grain mill. Just a joke.
Speaking of new grain mill, I need to dial that thing in. My efficiency was down from 80% to 67%. Need to go finer.
Batch sparging. I also think I didn't stir my grains enough. May get some channeling or dough balls?. I mash in one of those cylinder igloo coolers with a valve in place of a spout. Metal false bottom.Ornlu said:
What setup do you use? If it's batch sparge, going with a very dry mash and a very wet sparge is key to efficiency. Figure 1.15 or 1.2 quarts per pound for mash in, and 1.5 or 1.6 for sparge. Also, pH is king. 5.3 = peak efficiency.
I'm surprised the kernels wouldn't fit at .037" -- I think the standard recommendation I've heard is .038 and .052 sounds quite coarse. Either you're using a grain with larger kernels, or possibly not locking down the mill and it moved tighter during the crush? Or maybe my Harbor Freight feeler gauges are inaccurate, but I doubt they're that far off!Ornlu said:
My setup is an old school propane batch sparge system.
New mill is a "twin roller" brand. I initially set it to 0.037 inches (using spark plug feelers), but the grain would n't crush because the kernels just wouldn't fit into the rollers. It just wouldn't grab to start. So I widened it to 0.052 inches. It crushed quite quick. My old mill was just a $25 POS corona mill purchased from a Mexican meat market (so I have now idea what the setting was), but I had dialed it in over 50+ batches and 8+ years. It was perfect.
I'll get there with this one too. Just need time. I also should have mashed longer today, and stirred more.