Tag Archive: plate chiller
Another IPA Brew Day
So I decided later than usual on a Saturday to brew. This is a brew that I wanted to do the prior weekend, but my home AC was on the fritz and adding a bunch of humidity to it would not have been a very smart move.
This was an interesting brew day for two reasons. A large portion of the brew day was spent thinking that I would be preparing to brew the following day. I built an electric panel to fix the dangerous setup I had previously.
The thing is, I didn’t have the plug on the cord from the boiler ready. Once I did that, I added water and started things up. Then I went to work on preparing the mash tun. In my last post, I had the stuck sparge from Hell. I did NOT want that happening again. I added some plumbing solder in some strategic places and scrubbed down the copper. At that point (and after messing up and fixing solder joints twice, and since leaks don’t really matter here the mess ups were pretty important to fix), I decided to go ‘all in’ and start mashing.
I love problems that fix themselves!
This brew day had one minor mess up – for my IPA, I have hops at first wort (in the kettle), 15, 5, knockout, and dry. I did first wort, 15, 10, and knockout. Oops. It also had one issue that I thought would be a huge problem – my sparge water kept heating even after the PID said things were off. I didn’t notice until the water hit 205º F, and the heat was still on despite the output light on the PID controller not being on. So I unplugged the boiler to keep the water from boiling and let it cool. Later, when it was time to heat the water back up to sparge temperatures, I plugged the boiler back in and let it heat back up. And it worked correctly. And it worked correctly through the entire boil, too. I love problems that fix themselves!
They leak
Chilling had been an issue in the past, and I still reign supreme at having the most fucked up chilling schemes. This one isn’t much different. I bought a plate chiller on Amazon a few weeks ago. The water inlets and outlets were standard hose fittings. My house is six years old, and the cheap washing machine lines were something that was on the list of things to replace. I decided to purchase new stainless steel lines for the washing machine and use the old lines for the plate chiller.
They leak. Somehow in the process of unhooking them from the back of the washing machine and the wall and putting them on the plate chiller, they decided to leak. And these weren’t leaks that could be fixed by torquing down the connectors or using pipe tape (which is unnecessary on these connectors). And I made sure the O-rings were in the hose connectors.
So I did what any sane person would do. Since I didn’t have enough hose to set the plate chiller in the sink (that would have been optimal), I put the chiller in a bucket. Which started to fill. So to avoid flooding part of my basement, I used a small hose to siphon the leaking water out of the main bucket into another so I could dump water without moving the plate chiller around.
So on the shopping list is two new hoses. Because had I had not-leaking hoses, the plate chiller would have worked very well. And even allowing a lot of the trub go through was okay (I use pellet hops). I’m not sure what temperature I got things down to. Put the ale pail into the fermentation chamber and set it to chill at about 6:30. I ended up pitching the yeast at midnight or so.
The Recipe
The recipe has changed a little. I wanted it a little less malty and a little more crisp.
Recipe Details
Batch Size | Boil Time | IBU | SRM | Est. OG | Est. FG | ABV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 gal | 60 min | 71.4 IBUs | 5.4 SRM | 1.070 | 1.013 | 7.6 % |
Actuals | 1.051 | 1.01 | 5.4 % |
Style Details
Name | Cat. | OG Range | FG Range | IBU | SRM | Carb | ABV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
American IPA | 14 B | 1.056 - 1.075 | 1.01 - 1.018 | 40 - 70 | 6 - 15 | 2.2 - 2.7 | 5.5 - 7.5 % |
Fermentables
Name | Amount | % |
---|---|---|
Pale Malt (2 Row) US | 7 lbs | 50 |
Vienna Malt | 6 lbs | 42.86 |
Cara-Pils/Dextrine | 1 lbs | 7.14 |
Hops
Name | Amount | Time | Use | Form | Alpha % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cascade | 2 oz | 15 min | First Wort | Pellet | 6.6 |
Cascade | 0.5 oz | 15 min | Boil | Pellet | 6.6 |
Citra | 0.5 oz | 15 min | Boil | Pellet | 12 |
Galaxy | 0.5 oz | 15 min | Boil | Pellet | 11 |
Cascade | 0.5 oz | 5 min | Boil | Pellet | 6.6 |
Citra | 0.5 oz | 5 min | Boil | Pellet | 12 |
Galaxy | 0.5 oz | 5 min | Boil | Pellet | 11 |
Cascade | 1 oz | 15 min | Aroma | Pellet | 6.6 |
Citra | 1 oz | 15 min | Aroma | Pellet | 12 |
Galaxy | 1 oz | 15 min | Aroma | Pellet | 11 |
Cascade | 1 oz | 7 days | Dry Hop | Pellet | 6.6 |
Citra | 1 oz | 7 days | Dry Hop | Pellet | 11 |
Galaxy | 1 oz | 7 days | Dry Hop | Pellet | 11 |
Miscs
Name | Amount | Time | Use | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Irish Moss | 0.25 tsp | 15 min | Boil | Fining |
Yeast
Name | Lab | Attenuation | Temperature |
---|---|---|---|
American Ale (1056) | Wyeast Labs | 75% | 60°F - 72°F |
Mash
Step | Temperature | Time |
---|---|---|
Mash In | 148°F | 60 min |
Now the wait. One week (as of time of writing) to add dry hops, and one week to absorb. Then bottling and another week to two weeks to wait. I WISH IT WAS DONE ALREADY.
Cheers!