Are you just using iodised table salt? I'm brewing today and holding off my boil until 1pm, cause I need to go up and buy some uniodised stuff haha. I'm half and half on the iodised and uniodised thing, but better safe than sorry I reckon.
Permalink Reply by MrC on April 25, 2009 at 12:20pm
Today's brew is another split wort with some additional grain steeped in one half.
Base grist:
3.6kg Maris Otter
0.2kg Wheat
0.2kg Caramalt 30 EBC
OG around 1.040
Beer One - "Blonde Virgin" (my first blonde ale)
Sauvin at 60 min to 20 IBU
12g Home grown hops at flame out
Beer Two - "BB II" (attempt at a Bookbinder clone)
An additional 100g Crystal 240 EBC steeped in half of the wort.
NZ Styrian at 60 min to 24 IBU
15min Fuggles 5g
15min Riwaka 5g
0min Fuggles 10g
0min Riwaka 10g
May dry hop this with Fuggles & Riwaka depending on the one week taste test.
Permalink Reply by MrC on September 11, 2010 at 10:14am
[Edited Version]
Only just saw this Daron.
This beer was a single mash with the wort split into two pots to brew two seperate beers, 11L each.
- Beer one was the wort left "as is" after the mash.
- For beer two I took about 3L of the wort and steeped the additional crystal malt in it. I then added the the steeped portion back into the wort for beer two.
After that I hopped and fermented the two beers separately. An interesting little exercise.
I dry hopped BBII at a rate if 1g/L, 50% Fuggles & 50% Riwaka.
I was just watching some youtube and I am soooo not for hop bags aye. I can see how convenient they are, you know - just leave them in there while you are cooling and all that stuff...
But all I see is waste surface area... and loss of utilasation.
The ironic part, is while its cooling - the hops fall down the bottom anyway - so what's the point of the bag?
Each to his own, I guess. My current brewery practises involve me boiling in 2 pots on the stove, then cooling in sinks full of ice. If I didn't use hop bags (or improvised hop bags i.e. the wife's nylons!) then I'd be wasting a heck of a lot more wort when pouring into my fermenter.
Once I progress to a full-size kettle and some sort of immersion chiller I might be more likely to move to just chucking the hops in. I already generally do for the flameout addition.
I hear ya... they certainly have their place. But even when I was brewing the way you do, I strained them out when I got to the bottom of the kettle - which was much mroe dificult than the bags. You could argue that my extra step in process could have been a possible area for infection (I guess I was luck in that respect). It was certainly a 2 person job - straining the hops!
If Reviled where here, he would say use your "spare" BIAB bag as a f**ken huge hop sock....... in fact reviled that's what i'll use it for, thanks for the suggestion!
No worries James, any time ;o) Allthough id be worried about the bag burning/melting...
I used to use hop socks for all my additions but stopped and havnt noticed much of a diff apart from a bit more trub in the kettle, but this is taken care of by tipping the trub into jugs to settle overnight, then I save the odd litre of wort (cheers for the trick Jo)