Brew Day - 05May07 - Golden Ale

Get advice on making beer from raw ingredients (malt, hops, water and yeast)
Post Reply
eskimobob

Brew Day - 05May07 - Golden Ale

Post by eskimobob » Mon May 07, 2007 10:06 pm

Well I ran out of my BuzzBee recently and my Stout is getting worryingly low so I decided I had to get another brew in the bin...first brew in new house and back to brewing in the kitchen - I had a few trials to overcome :roll:

Went for a very simple pale malt only brew and also lightly hopped for friends that are not as keen on hoppy beers.

Brew length 19 litre based on 80% efficiency
3500gm Pale Malt, Halcyon (3.0 SRM)
25gm Goldings, East Kent [6%] (60 min) Hops 20.5 IBU
1 tsp Irish Moss (Boil 15.0 min)
1 pkt Safale S04 Yeast

Mash 90 mins in 9 litres at 64C
Boil total 90 mins

Expected: OG = 1.044 FG = 1.012 SRM = 4.3 IBU = 20.5
Edit: Actual: OG = 1.045 FG = 1.01?

First problem was with the mash - I forgot to fit the manifold before doughing in #-o - I managed to tip the mash tun backwards enough to insert the manifold without scalding my hand - just!

Image

Next problem was a stuck mash :roll: - The latest grain I have is a little bit finer crushed but with a bit of furtling things improved. I measured the grain bed temperature this time as SteveD has suggested on the forum and sure enough I had about 68C grain bed when the water in my bronco ( :wink: ) was up to boiling.

Image

Next problem was with the boil (no photo this time) - I had the copper sat on the oven so I could use the hood extractor to suck out the steam. Unfortunately about an hour in the extractor started making a fizzing noise :shock: - rapidly tunred it off. I decided to move the boiling copper when I noticed brown liquid starting to drip out of the extractor hood - pretty sure only one drop made it into the wort :evil: :roll:

So - back to steaming up the kitchen for the remaining part of the boil. So on to the CFC.

Image

As you can see, I had the garden hose coming in through the kitchen window to feed the CFC - turned the feed on to the outside tap (under the kitchen sink) and everything chilled fine - unfortunately I had not realised that the tap under the sink had been leaking so found a huge puddle in the cupboard under the sink :lol:

It's quite hard getting settled into a new brewery - better not make a habit out of this moving malarky :lol:

Anyway, it's safely in the FV now and has a nice yeast head - time will tell 8)

Edit: Forgot to say that I got approx 82% brewhouse efficiency so not bad - just as well I backed off my recipe to 80% though - I must have known things would not go smoothly.
Last edited by eskimobob on Wed May 09, 2007 3:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

prolix

Post by prolix » Mon May 07, 2007 10:14 pm

I have one of those hoselock tap connectors to use the tap in the kitchen as I have no outside drains (sealed pressure manifolds) as I live deep in a quarry, Stops back flow from the rest of the town! :wacko:

Wez

Post by Wez » Mon May 07, 2007 10:15 pm

Great reading EB I don't get bored of reading brew day theads :D , great efficiency BTW if I could hit that everytime i'd be well chuffed!

Vossy1

Post by Vossy1 » Mon May 07, 2007 10:19 pm

Gr8 result EB 8)

User avatar
Andy
Virtually comatose but still standing
Posts: 8716
Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2005 1:00 pm
Location: Ash, Surrey
Contact:

Post by Andy » Tue May 08, 2007 8:38 am

as I live deep in a quarry
Stig ?

:lol:
Dan!

iowalad
Under the Table
Posts: 1120
Joined: Wed Dec 13, 2006 3:22 am
Location: Iowa

Post by iowalad » Tue May 08, 2007 2:36 pm

Nicely done.

kinnockthecat

Post by kinnockthecat » Tue May 08, 2007 5:16 pm

As you can see, I had the garden hose coming in through the kitchen window to feed the CFC
I had something similar, n the damn thing started leaking resulting in a water fall from the kitchen work surface :oops: .......shudda named my beer Niagra!!!

User avatar
Garth
Falling off the Barstool
Posts: 3565
Joined: Tue Aug 22, 2006 1:00 pm
Location: Durham

Post by Garth » Tue May 08, 2007 7:15 pm

good work EB

eskimobob

Post by eskimobob » Wed May 09, 2007 12:59 pm

DaaB wrote:Well done EB, thats a nice little brew-day report and some great pics 8) (great efficiency too), btw have you fitted a thermometer to your fermenter yet?
Yep, you can just see the cable for it dangling around the bottom of the FV in the last photo. The Stud-coupling worked superbly as a gland once I had drilled it out to 4mm to take the PT100 probe - Cheers DaaB :D

I have the PT100 probe mounted at about the 10 litres level so that when I have the FV sat on my heat plate and attached to the PID, it works very well - not that keeping it warm at the moment is a problem :roll: Mind you, I have the PID plugged in anyway just so I can read the brew temp at a glance - it's sitting at 17.7C at the moment and has been about that since starting. Going to measure the SG later as the krausen is dying down now.

eskimobob

Post by eskimobob » Wed May 09, 2007 2:59 pm

Just taken a sample for measuring the SG and it's about 1014. It's pale to say the least and I'm very pleased with the taste - it's light tasting and I can see myself drinking a lot of this :wink:

Image

Post Reply