26.05.08 - Owd Bob
26.05.08 - Owd Bob
Brewing this today:
Malton Brewery Co. - Owd Bob
from Marc Ollosson's book.
With a remarkable bit of planning (for me) this is to be my Xmas brew which is going into bottle eventually.
Water just about at strike temperature - will post more in a while.
Malton Brewery Co. - Owd Bob
from Marc Ollosson's book.
With a remarkable bit of planning (for me) this is to be my Xmas brew which is going into bottle eventually.
Water just about at strike temperature - will post more in a while.
So this is the recipe:
Doughed in a few minutes ago at a mash temperature of 65.6C.
This brew gives me the chance to use a few new bits of kit:
1) In Wheeler's Home Brewing he suggests emptying the mash tun of the mash liquor and then fly sparging the drained grist rather than keeping the grains 'afloat'. Anyone tried this technique? Usually I keep the grains afloat.
2) How do I convert the brix reading on the refractometer into gravity?
Good luck to all those who are brewing today.
- Pale Malt (MO) 5840g
Crystal 200g
Black 170g
Challenger 97g (90 mins)
Challenger 19g (at switch off - Marc has it at 15 mins)
1 Whirlfloc 10 mins
Yeast: White Labs Dry English Ale WLP007
OG 1055
Final 1009
ABV 5.9%
Doughed in a few minutes ago at a mash temperature of 65.6C.
This brew gives me the chance to use a few new bits of kit:
- A bright, shiny Burco as HLT for the fly sparge
Wort aerator
refractometer
1) In Wheeler's Home Brewing he suggests emptying the mash tun of the mash liquor and then fly sparging the drained grist rather than keeping the grains 'afloat'. Anyone tried this technique? Usually I keep the grains afloat.
2) How do I convert the brix reading on the refractometer into gravity?
Good luck to all those who are brewing today.
I drain mine - it probably matters once you're looking at efficiency and so on. The other thing is that the grains will cool down - you want them nice and warm so they don't cool the sparge water, which wants to be at 77 or 78 degrees C when it hits the grains. This is the temp where you get the highest solubility of sugars. Various people on JBK have cunning swan-neck things on their mash tuns, so they can run-off at a rate that is replenished by the sparging, either with just the surface of the grains exposed or indeed with the surface covered. I haven't got that far yet.
Brix to SG: here and here.
Have a great day!
Brix to SG: here and here.
Have a great day!
There are some days when you just aren't meant to brew. Finally retrieved the hop filter from the mash tun, fixed it to the boiler transferred lovely dark wort from other vessel and set it off to boil. I went out 15 mins ago to find steaming hot wort dribbling through the heating element washer all over the garage floor.
Everything transferred back into the FV, replaced washer and it's back on the go again while I wash the FV AGAIN!
I'll laugh about it on Xmas Day when I'm cracking into a bottle
Everything transferred back into the FV, replaced washer and it's back on the go again while I wash the FV AGAIN!
I'll laugh about it on Xmas Day when I'm cracking into a bottle

Thanks folks (sorry, I'm not getting much chance to post on here at the moment and getting round to dealing with pics requires, for me, another half hour!)
The remainder did go well and yeast was pitched at about 6.30 so the whole process because of cock-ups took an inordinate 9 hours.
However, the good news is that by the next morning the yeast was beginning to do its stuff and last night, 36 hours later, I dropped it into secondary to rid it of all the initial gummy resins. This is a technique recommended in Graham Wheeler's Home Brewing. Within a couple of hours a new and clean head had formed and this morning it's going like a good 'un.
I was really pleased with the new kit I introduced to the process: the HLT contributed to a much improved efficiency and I just love the refractometer - what a breeze!
I'm really not sure I can wait 'til Xmas to taste this one.
The remainder did go well and yeast was pitched at about 6.30 so the whole process because of cock-ups took an inordinate 9 hours.
However, the good news is that by the next morning the yeast was beginning to do its stuff and last night, 36 hours later, I dropped it into secondary to rid it of all the initial gummy resins. This is a technique recommended in Graham Wheeler's Home Brewing. Within a couple of hours a new and clean head had formed and this morning it's going like a good 'un.
I was really pleased with the new kit I introduced to the process: the HLT contributed to a much improved efficiency and I just love the refractometer - what a breeze!
I'm really not sure I can wait 'til Xmas to taste this one.