Overnight Ale Brew Day

This went well.  I made a list of new things to be sure to do:

  1. Check water pH – 5.6-6.0
  2. Tun – line with bag then add water
  3. Add pH stabilizer
  4. Stir grain in slowly and carefully (note: crushed grain came from Brewmaster’s Warehouse all mixed evenly in one plastic bag.  Very cool!)
  5. Iodine test at 30 and 60 min – it looked very good.  A little hard to tell with the dark liquid, but conversion was definitely taking place.  I also poured some off to taste it at the end of the sparge, and it was corn-syrup sweet.
  6. Sparge entire volume into a vessel other than the boil kettle – I used my primary fermenter.
  7. I ended up with about 8 gallons, so I used 7.5 gal or so in the boil.  About 30 minutes in, I added another gallon to top up the brew pot.  Gravity adjusted for temperature was 1.046.
  8. I kept a nice, calm, rolling boil throughout the 60 minutes.  Hop additions all went smoothly.  The BeerSmith timer worked wonderfully for this.
  9. Cool to 72F
  10. After emptying and sanitizing the primary fermenter, I poured the wort through a strainer, catching a pretty large amount of trub.  I believe it also aerated well.
  11. Adjusted gravity at end of boil: 1.049
  12. 5.6 gallons in primary
  13. Fermentation chamber set to 68F
  14. Pitch yeast
Sweet Wort

Sweet Wort

The Boil

The Boil

All was well with the brew day.  When I checked for yeast activity later in the day…nothing.  Hmmm… agitated the wort a little and checked in the morning.  NOTHING!  Oh, man what now??  When I got home from work I checked again and it was still dead flat.  It sure seemed like the 2 bags of Wyeast had failed.  Hard to imagine, especially since there was some swelling of the bags after smacking on Brew Day morning.  Luckily, I had a spare packet of Fermentis 05, so I carefully sprinkled that in.  By the time I came home Tuesday night, CDA2 was bubbling happily away.  Smells great, too!

Stay tuned…

 

Hops Update 6-3-13

Unfortunately, all I got out of the rhizomes was some damp sticks.  Angry Dave gave me another rhizome and a Fuggle crown from Great Lakes Hops (thanks, Dave!).  I was so happy with how the crown was growing that I ordered a Columbus crown myself…and received a free (Lucky Dog) Fuggle as well.  I put them all in pots and placed the Fuggles in partial shade under some oak trees.  After keeping the Columbus in full shade for a week or so I then moved it into direct sunlight.

1st Fuggle

2nd Fuggle
2nd Fuggle

1st Fuggle

Columbus

Columbus

Since they are growing so well, I started to get concerned about the stupid deer eating them.  I found some deer repellent tape at my local Ace and put it up per the instructions.  We’ll see…

Deer Barrier

Deer Barrier