I’m new to the hobby (obsession?). I’m absolutely hooked, in spite of about 4 and a half gallons of really lousy oatmeal stout. My second batch is under my belt now, and looking back at my first I’m amazed at what I’ve learned since.
First Batch:
Didn’t cool the wort (dumped it on top of 2 and a half gallons cold water in carboy, result being it didn’t cool to 75 for about 5 hours)
Didn’t aerate wort
Pitched dry yeast without re-hydrating
Fermented 5 gallons in a 5 gallon carboy without a blowoff setup (initially)
Had fermentation temps all over the place (I live in MI and heat with wood, gone during the day)
The result was an under attenuated beer (finished around 1.024) that tastes not much like an oatmeal stout. Some fruit/alcohol wine flavors.
Since then I’ve listened to about 40 hrs worth of podcasts (mostly brewstrong), finished one book (Papazians), halfway through J Palmers “How to Brew”, bought “Brewing Classic Styles”, started a brew logbook, purchased an additional 6.5 g carboy, ranco 2 stage controller, fermwrap, thermowell, yeast starter flask, and about 10 other things I’ll remember after I post this.
My 2nd batch (dry hopped APA) is currently sitting at exactly 68 degrees awaiting bottling this weekend. High hopes for that one.
Haha, I’m new to the hobby too. My first batch of pale ale was about 8 months ago, I read Papazian’s and John Palmer’s book before I started brewing, so I thought I knew what I was doing, but it was a disaster, I actually ended up throwing it away. Tried again the next day and that one came out really good. It became an obsession after that. ;D
Brewing again this sunday. Going to try a starter for the first time. OG should be 1.050-1.053. Using WLP001, and I’ve read that it may not be necessary to use a starter with that gravity? Is it a “best practice” to do one anyway?
This isn’t really the best answer but I’ve never made a starter, not for not wanting to but my brewing tends to be very spontaneous and I can never get my schedule coordinated in time to make one! I direct pitch liquid yeast either Wyeast or White labs and I do use yeast nutrient in the end of the boil to make up for it. Fermentation is generally rolling within 8 hours. I generally don’t brew really “big” beers and of the 100+ gallons done this year, they’ve all been great!
Most everyone i know does make a starter though, regardless of the beer, they just tend to be more organized than I am in their schedule…
While it isn’t absolutely necessary to make a starter for a beer of that gravity it is advisable that you do. If you haven’t the time or organization then dry yeast is a perfect alternative. S-05 ought to be the same as 001. Re-hydrating can be done in less than 20 minutes and pitched into the wort. I’ve been getting fast ferments this way. Less than 5 hours for a big head of krausen to develop.
If you pitch just a vial of liquid yeast it may take up to 36 hours to show active fermentation. The beer won’t be as good as one pitched with a starter.
Didn’t cool the wort (dumped it on top of 2 and a half gallons cold water in carboy, result being it didn’t cool to 75 for about 5 hours) - No need to rush. I usually don’t pitch until ~12 hours later to get the temps where I want them. 75 bad. 65 good.
Didn’t aerate wort - actually you did some. Pouring into the carboy will aerate some (not to the standards of the O2 users but probably could use a little more).
Pitched dry yeast without re-hydrating - I don’t. Some do, some don’t, who cares. The jury is still out on this one.
Fermented 5 gallons in a 5 gallon carboy without a blowoff setup (initially) - ouch.
Had fermentation temps all over the place (I live in MI and heat with wood, gone during the day) - double ouch. Put the carboy on a container of water and it will keep the fluxuations to a minimum.
Very interesting thread. I’ll be doing my first five gallon batch (at least without help, that is) this weekend. Also bottling my first five gallon batch (brewed with a lot of help). I’m going to keep a close eye on this thread because I think we’re in mostly the same boat. I will of course be reporting on my experiences down the line too.
I’m already obsessed!!
My temperature control is much easier. I’m also using dry yeast on batches 2 and 3 so that should make a difference too.
Have yet to decide what batch 4 will be. I suspect I’ll pick up ingredients for some type of “red” next time I hit St Louis. I’ve got multiple books (joy of homebrewing, how to brew, beer captured), and I’ve narrowed batch 4 down to a couple different red recipes.
My second/third batches will be an extract IPA and a sweet stout (haven’t decided the order yet).
[quote]Had fermentation temps all over the place (I live in MI and heat with wood, gone during the day) - double ouch. Put the carboy on a container of water and it will keep the fluxuations to a minimum.
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I picked up a Ranco controller and a ferm wrap heater, working really well. I’m able to maintain 68 degrees with a towel around it for a bit of insulation. Much better than trying to control ambient room temp. Went the space heater route prior. The girlfriend will probably shoot me when the electric bill comes
Hilarious. I’m also just took up homebrewing and made basically exactly the same rookie mistakes (except the 5gal carboy - yikes), then read the same books (+ JZ’s "Brewing Classic Styles), and procured much of the same equipment. I just opened my first beer last week. A very hoppy IPA covered many of my mistakes, but it is still pretty “meh”.
In the last six weeks I’ve cooked up four more batches, including my first lager. Pounding out so many beers is definitely helping me to get my technique down. I only wish I could get the results quicker so I could learn more along the way.
If I only had a flux capacitor. Oh, the things I would tell six weeks ago me.