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I reckon I isolated it to either my kettle tap or my "old favourite" fermentor - the one I've had for a few years. Had a close look at the fermentor and found the injection moulding tag on the bottom was rough and possibly hiding bugs - I never use scourers to clean but the entire inside surface was slightly rougher than my other fermentors - a characteristic of the moulding process too i guess. Also I figured I could remove the lid and rubber seal as a possible source by switching to glad wrap.
So all in all - swapped to a new fermentor, new tap for the fermentor and kettle, new transfer tubing and used glad wrap to cover up - results seem good so far. But I won't be too cocky, the real test will be when this batch has been in the bottle for 4 months (if it lasts that long!)
I agree on the electric HLT - best thing I've done for time and convenience in the last year.
I seem to be going through an American hop phase at the moment, although finances suggest this will be short-lived. Yesterday I kegged an Imperial American Brown (Tasty McDole's Janet's Brown) which is tasting like liquid jaffas! This was kegged while I was brewing an attempt at a clone of Russian River's Pliny The Elder. The recipe came from as close to the horse's mouth as I could get - published by head brewer Vinnie Cilurzzo in the AHA's Zymurgy magazine in July 2010. The recipe has evolved a bit over the years apparently, so this one was down to just three hop varieties: Columbus, Simcoe & Centennial. Shedloads of them!
I was a little worried as the recipe called for 100g of Columbus at the start of a 90 minute boil, which BeerSmith calculated as 123 IBUs! However, when I tasted the wort going into the fermenter it was surprisingly non-bitter. Lots of hop flavour & aroma though, and I hit my target OG bang on (1.072). Let's hope for a nice clean ferment.
Hi, I'm new posting here but have been reading this forum for ages. So far I've brewed the obligatory Coopers lager kit and 3 partial mash brews (an ESB, a Porter and a Stout) and have gone over to an all grain (BIAB) for the first time this weekend. In hope of some warmer weather I brewed a golden ale:
20L, OG 1040, 32 IBU
88% Malteurop
5% Pale crystal
5% Sugar
2% Wheat
60 mins 20g Saaz
30 mins10g Nelson Sauvin
15 mins 10g Saaz
10 mins10g Riwaka
5 mins10g Saaz
0 mins 20g Riwaka
Fermenting at 14c (ambient temp) with Nottingham yeast, hopefully for a clean ferment. Sugar added to boost gravity a few points as my efficiency was low. Hoping for a clean, balanced, refreshing summery beer.
Putting down a 60L lager in the next couple of days
12.75kg Malteurop Premium Pils
1.5 kg Malteurop Munich
0.75kg Carapils
30gm Green Bullet 60mins
30gm Green Bullet 30mins
25gm Hallertau Tradition 15 mins
25gm Czech Saaz 15 mins
25gm Hallertau Tradition 1 mins
25gm Czech Saaz 1 mins
Koppafloc 10 mins
50gms w34/70
Mash at 65 1 hour
Boil 1 hour
Any critique appreciated. Hallertau/Saaz combo ok?
Aiming for about 1.050
Being a hop head, I hate to say this...
It seems your IBUs are a bit high for a lager. I would either reduce the 60 and 30 min weight of hops considerably, or go with something with a bit lower IBU. Maybe Motueka would be good as a sub? The thing is, it is related to your saaz hops, but a bit of different taste. Personally, I would just go Motueka and Hallertau.
What yeast are your planning on using?
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