thank you Daryl!daryl wrote:The wort is ready for pickup.
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thank you Daryl!daryl wrote:The wort is ready for pickup.
1.054 here, close enough for horseshoes, hand grenades, homebrewing, and sometimes pregnancy. Brew on my friends!tony b wrote:Alec gave me the gravity in Plato, which I'm not familiar with, so he "guesstimated" it to be about 1.056. I measured it myself when I got home and it was 13.2 Brix or 1.052, so he was "close enough for government work."
Doing different stuff w/ wort rally, but I've done a few batches precisely that way. I use kegs for whirlpool & fermenting - but whatever works. I am looking forward to comparing and contrasting. It's a great way to understand different hops. With post-boil hopping, I've learned one good rule of thumb. More hops = more delicious. Prost!karl wrote:It was a good brew day!
My 10 gallons was split boiled with Magnum for bittering and then split into three and each whirlpooled with a different hop: Chinook, Simcoe and Citra. Three wort rally APA are now fermenting merrily with WLP002.
Next year I should have more fermentor capacity and hope to sign up for 20 gallons.
This was a fun experience, definitely excited to try and hear about everyone else's renditions of the wort. Might consider the same ordering more next year And waiting to brew Saturday instead, a 2 hour boil Friday night almost did me in.karl wrote:It was a good brew day!
My 10 gallons was split boiled with Magnum for bittering and then split into three and each whirlpooled with a different hop: Chinook, Simcoe and Citra. Three wort rally APA are now fermenting merrily with WLP002.
Next year I should have more fermentor capacity and hope to sign up for 20 gallons.
I did:Schwerkraftbrauer wrote: This was a fun experience, definitely excited to try and hear about everyone else's renditions of the wort. Might consider the same ordering more next year And waiting to brew Saturday instead, a 2 hour boil Friday night almost did me in.
All of my stuff is stored in the same area (fermentation, equipment, yeasts, bacterias).daryl wrote:Andrew, how are you managing your brewing that use only yeast, and brews that use bugs?
I am thinking of having separate equipment and separate locations, to keep them separate.
I really want to brew with some wild yeasts, but I want to make sure I control them so there is no cross-contamination.
Would it be too warm for a lager yeast? I haven't researched or seen that variety of yeast but isn't lager fermentation usually in the middle to low 50s? I know yeast that is close to expiration date they usually recommend making a starter just to build up viable yeast, perhaps they're just being sluggish conditioning to the wort and temperature to build up activity, but I would think after 3 days you would see some airlock activity and CO2 from the yeast.daryl wrote:WLP802 Czech Budejovice Lager Yeast
I had two packages of WLP802, one I purchased about a month ago, the second one I purchased last week. Both had been stored in my fridge prior to use. The expiration days were the same for both packages, and no earlier than May 2018.
I left the packages out when I started brewing, so they could get to room temperature.
I brewed 10 gallons of the rally wort for a lager. Boiled, hopped, cooled, and then pumped the wort into to two-5 gallon buckets and I pitched the yeast.
It has been three days and nothing, the airlocks have not so much as moved; ambient temperature is nominally 65F, a little higher with these warm days. These buckets are stored right next to ones containing ales, that were pitched later...and they are in full krausen.
I am suspecting that the two lager packages were dead.
Thoughts.