Twins!View attachment 12820 Here is a little more than a gallon and a half of Herm’s West Coast IPA, pitched with slurry from my Amber Ale (3rd generation, originally US-05). I’ll be dry hopping with Cascade, Centennial and Chinook at high krausen. I need to buy some more Cascade for this purpose.
You busy brewer - good for you!Brewed a single hop pale with Columbus. I'll dry hop one fermenter for comparison View attachment 13213 View attachment 13214
View attachment 13245 Herm’s Amber Ale in the new fermenter. Hit my numbers, but mash temperature got much lower than planned. I started at 160*F, but as soon as grains were in the bag and stirred, mash temperature had dropped to ~152*F. By the end of the 60 minute mash, temperature was down to ~146*F. Going forward with my new kettle, I probably need to either heat strike water several degrees warmer, or install a riser to elevate grain bag so that direct heat could be applied.
This may make some people cringe, but here goes.I wonder if preheating my grains in my oven on a “warm”setting, while the strike water is heating, would that help reduce the temperature drop at dough in? It seems a good warm sleeping bag or blanket would definitely help in maintaining a steady mash temp. Are there drawbacks to applying any warming heat to the grains just prior to doughing in?
I wonder if preheating my grains in my oven on a “warm”setting, while the strike water is heating, would that help reduce the temperature drop at dough in? It seems a good warm sleeping bag or blanket would definitely help in maintaining a steady mash temp. Are there drawbacks to applying any warming heat to the grains just prior to doughing in?