Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

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yashicamat
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Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by yashicamat » Sun Dec 14, 2008 9:03 pm

Well, despite my bad back, I managed to get a brewday in today! Had to get some assistance to carry the honey porter I barrelled this afternoon (as I needed the FV for this one) though.

This was the first outing of my new HLT with ballvalve, the idea being I can fly sparge without the need to run about with jugs of water. Really worked a treat. 8) Note though, I need to keep an eye on the level of the water in the mash tun. It got a bit high and caused the manifold to block up a bit, so I had to free it, but it was fine after that. I noticed there was a lot less muck in the boiler too, looks like the combination of using this method of sparging (which you can see in the pic how I've kept the water disturbance to a minimum) and the lack of any disturbance to the grainbed has resulted in a much better grain filter. :)

Anyhow, here's the recipe I ended up with:

3400g crushed Pearl malt
170g crushed crystal malt
40g challenger for 60 mins
40g challenger for 15 mins

1 No. whirlfloc tablet
US-05 american ale yeast

This was also the first time I've treated the water, so here's what I used based on plugging most of the water report figures into Graham's calculator, setting figures for a dry pale ale.

8.5ml CRS
13.7g gypsum

Then I added my usual 1/2 crushed campden tablet.

I was aiming to collect 28 litres preboil, ending up with about 25 litres post boil. However, when I collected 27 litres, the SG reading was 1056. :shock: Maybe this is the increase in efficiency (partly) due to the corrected water? Now, maybe someone could shed some light on this, but I topped up the boiler with 6 litres of treated water, and the new 33 litres of wort was reading 1034. :? The temperature was pretty much the same (both figures corrected, although I cooled both samples to about 22 degrees so very little adjustment). 1034 was what I was aiming for though, but I am failing to understand how a) my first reading was so high (I stirred well before taking the sample too) and b) how it could have reduced by that much with only about a 20% increase in volume? I would have expected closer to about 1045 ish . . . . unless my theory on specifc gravity readings is up the spout . . . :oops:

The final gravity was 1037 which is pretty much bang on really. If US-05 munches down to 1008 then it'll be bang on 3.6%. :D

Here's some piccies:

Grain being weighed out:
Image

New sparging setup with HLT:
Image

Image

Clear runnings going into the boiler:
Image

Post boil chiller in - looking very clear!
Image

Lots of trub left behind!
Image

Apologies there aren't many photos, it was a bit of a hectic brewday! :D
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

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Horden Hillbilly
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Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by Horden Hillbilly » Sun Dec 14, 2008 9:10 pm

Well done, pleased to see that you managed to get your brew done despite your bad back. Lovely looking clear wort, this looks like a winner! 8)

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yashicamat
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Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by yashicamat » Sun Dec 14, 2008 9:13 pm

Horden Hillbilly wrote:Well done, pleased to see that you managed to get your brew done despite your bad back. Lovely looking clear wort, this looks like a winner! 8)
Cheers. :) Christmas embargo on brewing is in place now! :lol:
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

mysterio

Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by mysterio » Sun Dec 14, 2008 9:15 pm

Looks good! I've tried a couple of conistons in the past, nothing like the real thing but tasty nonetheless :lol:

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Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by yashicamat » Tue Dec 16, 2008 11:37 am

mysterio wrote:Looks good! I've tried a couple of conistons in the past, nothing like the real thing but tasty nonetheless :lol:
Yeah, well I've only had Coniston a handful of times (always on draught, always in the Lakes . . . suprisingly :lol: ) so I may not accurately remember what it tasted like, but if this beer tastes very good then that'll do me. :D

I keep having a nagging feeling I added a bit more gypsum than I was supposed to as I treated two batches of water seperately. I worked out the split weights, but I keep having this mental image of weighing out 14g. :? Hopefully if I did add about 20g instead of 14g it won't be the end of the world though.
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

ChrisG

Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by ChrisG » Tue Dec 16, 2008 2:55 pm

Looks a good one, nice clear wort, well done!

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yashicamat
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Re: Coniston Bluebird - 14/12/08

Post by yashicamat » Tue Dec 23, 2008 7:46 pm

Pants. :( I used two FVs, a Better Bottle and also an old Boots bucket which I've previously used for grain storage. Just taken a hydro sample from the boots bucket . . . smells like vinegar and doesn't taste too clever either. :( Tried one from the Better Bottle and while it doesn't smell of vinegar, it doesn't exactly taste very nice though. Not good at all. :( Methinks a slip-up somewhere during the cooling phase. Only thing I can think of that was different (and could have caused the problem) is the lid went on the boiler during cooling as people came around unexpectedly, so they were in and out of the kitchen. I can only assume some condensation must have built up on the lid (which wasn't steralised #-o ) and dropped in.
Rob

POTTER BREWERY (mothballed 2020)

Fermenting: nowt (sadly). Drinking: still a few bottles of my imperial stout knocking about . . . it's rather good now

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