How to brew beer (in this case an American Pale Ale – Bungo style)
Step One – select your ingredients.
For 40 L of our American Pale Ale we used:
8 kg Ale malt
460 g Caramalt
250 g Dark Munich
(I was also supposed to use 30 g of Chocolate Wheat but you can only use what you can find in the local HBS – or in this case, one in the Blue Mountains, don’t ask)
60 g of Cascade hops
100 g of Williamete.
For 40 L of our American Pale Ale we used:
8 kg Ale malt
460 g Caramalt
250 g Dark Munich
(I was also supposed to use 30 g of Chocolate Wheat but you can only use what you can find in the local HBS – or in this case, one in the Blue Mountains, don’t ask)
60 g of Cascade hops
100 g of Williamete.
For the observant ones, you’ll notice the grains in the photo are not the ones I used for the Pale Ale – sometimes you just can’t get that organised.
Step two
Add grains to mash tun.
Add grains to mash tun.
Step Three
Add water to grains (mash in). Raise temperature to 67 degrees and recirculate on the Brew Magic for an hour.
Add water to grains (mash in). Raise temperature to 67 degrees and recirculate on the Brew Magic for an hour.
Step Four
Raise temp to 80 degrees for mash out – hold for 15 minutes. Heat sparge water in hot liquor tank (HLT) to 80 degrees.
Step Five
Realise that the regulator you are using is not big enough to supply enough gas (the one supplied from the US has a different fitting) and run to and from the kitchen several times with hot water heated in the electric kettle!
Raise temp to 80 degrees for mash out – hold for 15 minutes. Heat sparge water in hot liquor tank (HLT) to 80 degrees.
Step Five
Realise that the regulator you are using is not big enough to supply enough gas (the one supplied from the US has a different fitting) and run to and from the kitchen several times with hot water heated in the electric kettle!
Step Six
Sparge by opening the tap into the boil kettle, and pumping sparge water from the HLT to the top of the mash.
Sparge by opening the tap into the boil kettle, and pumping sparge water from the HLT to the top of the mash.
Step Seven
Stop sparging when you reckon it’s the right time. Given my lack of knowledge at this stage I was just happy that the stuff coming out of the mash tun looked like beer!!!!!!!
Step Eight
Take a step back and think you’re tops ‘cause it seems to have worked.
Step Nine
Light fire under boil kettle and try to get to a rolling boil.
Step Ten
Realise regulator is still piss weak (see Step Five above) and that it is never going to get to 100 degrees. Turn everything off. Detach regulator, jump in car and drive to gas fitters’/plumbers’ suppliers in town looking for new regulator. 45 minutes later, return home, attach new regulator and realise you had no idea what you were asking for at the plumbers shop ‘cause the new one is the same.
Put lid on boil kettle. Become amazed as it actually starts to boil.
Step Eleven
Boil for 60 minutes adding the Cascade hops at the start of the boil, half the Williamete with 15 minutes to go, and the other half at the end of the boil. Smell those American hops - mmmmmmm.
Step Twelve
Attach cold water hose to plate chiller, other end in a down pipe so that waste water goes back into rain water tank (clever huh??) and open tap from boil kettle. Collect the cooled, sweet wort (look it up) in the fermenter.
Stop sparging when you reckon it’s the right time. Given my lack of knowledge at this stage I was just happy that the stuff coming out of the mash tun looked like beer!!!!!!!
Step Eight
Take a step back and think you’re tops ‘cause it seems to have worked.
Step Nine
Light fire under boil kettle and try to get to a rolling boil.
Step Ten
Realise regulator is still piss weak (see Step Five above) and that it is never going to get to 100 degrees. Turn everything off. Detach regulator, jump in car and drive to gas fitters’/plumbers’ suppliers in town looking for new regulator. 45 minutes later, return home, attach new regulator and realise you had no idea what you were asking for at the plumbers shop ‘cause the new one is the same.
Put lid on boil kettle. Become amazed as it actually starts to boil.
Step Eleven
Boil for 60 minutes adding the Cascade hops at the start of the boil, half the Williamete with 15 minutes to go, and the other half at the end of the boil. Smell those American hops - mmmmmmm.
Step Twelve
Attach cold water hose to plate chiller, other end in a down pipe so that waste water goes back into rain water tank (clever huh??) and open tap from boil kettle. Collect the cooled, sweet wort (look it up) in the fermenter.
Step Thirteen
Add yeast.
Step Fourteen
Wait for seven days until fermentation is complete.
By this time, it was getting dark – which is kind of disturbing ‘cause the sun is going down rather late at this time of year. And somewhere between step 9 and 12 Jessica got home to provide helpful suggestions on clean up, I think, cause after 12 hours of this, and several beers along the way, I needed all the help I could get.
Add yeast.
Step Fourteen
Wait for seven days until fermentation is complete.
By this time, it was getting dark – which is kind of disturbing ‘cause the sun is going down rather late at this time of year. And somewhere between step 9 and 12 Jessica got home to provide helpful suggestions on clean up, I think, cause after 12 hours of this, and several beers along the way, I needed all the help I could get.
Step Fifteen
Get rid of spent grains
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