Post #2251 made 14 years ago
Hi jsndyr,, welcome...

Biab is the easiest way to get into AG.. One Pot One Bag One FV One Keg and One Glass and you'll be One happy brewer..well maybe Two Glass's if your sharing with your wife.

Have a good read and post any questions you may have we are here to help..

:luck:

Yeasty
Why is everyone talking about "Cheese"
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Post #2253 made 14 years ago
Good Day busmanray, Welcome Aboard! I would suggest a 5 gallon batch of all grain can be done with a 6 gallon kettle, but will be a lot of work because the batch should be sparged to get a full volume and the sparge will need to aqdded many times during a long boil. To understand what I just said Please see "The Commentary" at http://www.biabrewer.info/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=190 and the MAXI BIAB at http://www.biabrewer.info/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=190
You may want to divide the 5 gallon kit by half and make 2x2.6 gallon batches which would be MUCH easier!
Good luck and If you have any questions PLease post!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2254 made 14 years ago
Hi, I'm from Footscray, Melbourne, Australia.

I went to an AG BIAB demo at 'Grain and Grape' in Yarraville a few months back and they mentioned this site.

I am thoroughly bored with kits ('n' bits) now and i am ready (i think) to go AG.

Probably just try to scrounge a pot to do a few Mini-Biabs to start and then move on to maxi or a bigger pot?

Amazing site so much info, i reckon i just need to dive in now and have a crack.

Cheers!
"Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer."
- Henry Lawson

Post #2255 made 14 years ago
Hi All, I am planning to do my first BIAB, which is also my first all grain, this weekend. I have been reading about it for quite a while, and decided to finally take the plunge and do it. Beachbum's guide to BIAB in an urn is what convinced me. I have been brewing kits for years and have just started doing extracts. After reading Beachbum's guide, I figured its not much more work to go AG and as I understand it, the end results are far better.

Post #2256 made 14 years ago
Good Day Nu_brew, Welcome! BIAB is easy, and you can do BIAB anytime.
If You Can Find a 40L kettle, that would be a good sIze for Full Volume small batches as well as High gravity MAXI-BIAB brews!
If you have questions, let us know, so we can help!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2257 made 14 years ago
Good Day DanteHicks, Welcome to the Site!, BB is a good source to All-Grain Electric BIAB. You will get much better beer with All-Grain than anytging else, and BIAB makes it easy!
If you need help..Just post, and we will answer.
Good luck this Weekend!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2258 made 14 years ago
Greetings all...Perhaps I can get some guidance and/or help, I started trying to build beer around last November. The BIAB method seems to be ingenious in its simplicity. I have a turkey fryer which is now my brew kettle, and will be doing my 5th biab on saturday. A few problems I am having- let me start by saying I'm brewing on a shoestring budget, not because I can't afford to become properly equipped, but more because I really enjoy acomplishing much with little. On to my questions... I have plenty of kettle to brew 5gal batches, usually end with 3.3-3.5 gal, I am using 4gal pet bottles for fermenters, the smaller volumes really keep things manageable. I have attempted to use "the Calculator" but I don't have excel, etc, on my computer, is there another version which requires less software on my end? I have been scaling up / down recipies somewhat linearly, and my results have been less than what I consider great, or even good. I did attempt the Amarillo APA twice, verbatim- the small volume was perfect for my fermenters, I think both of them taste like snail piss. I could only get whole hops, not pellitized, could this be why the stuff tastes like fruit punch?? The yeast selections I have been using are all in the dry arena, I use safale s-05 or 04 for the most part, (no starter) I don't get a high amount of krausen, but my ferm valve will bubble away for at least a day or two, another oddity I've noticed, fermentation starts very quickly, within hours. I leave in at least a week, I don't own a hydrometer- and neither did the mesopotamians- to be honest, with the smaller volumes I'm brewing, I want a refractometer, just can't justify it yet. My previous was a chocolate stout that was somewhat palatable, and I have a generic esb in ferm now- will bottle this weekend while my mash is happening. . I'm trying not to become discouraged, but I haven't been able to approach the flavor of a "commercial" beer- and I have sampled(??) many over the years. It is apparent that I am doing something fundamentally wrong, but I can't figure out what it is. My sanitization systems are good ( I use c brite and one step very liberally) I can't detect chlorine or chloramines in my water(doesn't mean it's not there, just have very good tasting water) I have almost constant temps of approx. 65-68 deg.f. for fermentation. I do "second" in the bottle, usually a 2 wk minimum before I even taste test the stuff. I use dextrose to prime and have good carb. I do not have a bottling wand, tho I bottle from a 2 gal igloo with a spout and am careful not to over aireate. I have two thermometers in use on brewday, thinking that I might have overshot the mash temps, but no, unless they are both wrong. The only thing I can think of that I do different is that I use the perforated liner inside the brewpot to shield my bag AND when the mash is complete, I found I can hang the inner liner using some s hooks to the outside lip of the brewpot, sort of acts as a strainer, but will take the pressure of a very heavy squeeze using an appropriate sized potlid. I can sparge if I want to easily. will the two walls have any effect?? only did that for the last three biabs. I know I'm leaving a bunch of stuff out, I'm almost certain it is something small that I'm tripping over, just can't see what it is. any ideas would be appreciated....
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Post #2259 made 14 years ago
Good Day Skates, Welcome! You mentioned the Amarillo hops taste fruity, I wonder do you quick-chill or No-Chill, it may be the hops are a bit high for your size batch.

Also, do you airate the wort as it goes into the fermenter (Pour back to the kettle, back to the fermenter, a few times) It really helps the fermentation, and will aid in getting most friuty esters out of the wort.

You did not say what your grain bill is/was, I had some pretty poor batches due to my grains being well passed its prime(OLD)

How long do you mash? a short mash will leave a very watery beer. How long did you boil? a very long boil will add a lot of hop flavor (sometimes not so good).

If you could post your recipe, it would make it easier to check for problems, and make some better suggestions.
Good Luck on your next brew, and keep us posted on how your doing!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2260 made 14 years ago
Hi there, first post!

Am just getting back into brewing after about ten years off...corresponding with small kids and moving from new York to North London. my wife thinks its great that I'm doing this in case we end up living somewhere there is no beer :) just a couple of kits in the last few months since restarting.

Anyway, as it's been a long time I don't have all the kit I once had so BIAB looks like a great way to skip drilling a lot of holes in copper pipe! Great site...look forward to the journey.

I'm setting up to mash in a 40l buffalo boiler. I've read a lot on the site but not so much on good practices for isolating trub, which it seems to me there must be a lot more of without the filtering that happens in normal "three vessel" AG. Any advice?

Rens

Post #2261 made 14 years ago
Good Day Rens(rens), Welcome! BIAB IS a great way to brew. A 40 liter Buffulo seems to be the kettle of choice today.
There seems to be a myth of "crystal clear wort" out there, Many find Yeast really need and love some Trub. Some have tested dumping ALL the trub into the fermenter, and report NO Problems.
I myself, strain most all trub with a large funnel coverd with CheeseCloth (all sanitized), and have had no problems to date.
If you don't use a lot of wheat, or Oats, the beer turns out clear without using 'floc or 'Geli. Just something most of us have found!
Check our topic "Forgot to order whirfloc" http://www.biabrewer.info/viewtopic.php?f=41&t=522

Good Luck and if you have questions, just post and we can help you!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2262 made 14 years ago
Welcome rens!
I agree with joshua on mostly everything.
Ok I don't use cheesecloth but without it I get a pretty clear brew.
Especially if you give the beer a bit care and love :)

I got an IPA which is almost crystal clear,
it was like cold crashed at ambient temps(5-6 C) here for 2-3 days.

Post #2263 made 14 years ago
Hi Everyone

New to the site - I'm from Stanley, County Durham, UK. Found your site from board posts on Jims Beer Kit.

Just started brewing in the last 4 weeks, have done a kit brew [not tried it yet - still conditioning, hopefully will taste ok]
and about to start on an extract kit once my 19ltr pot arrives.

Decided to look into all grain due to the high price of the malt extract. Looking to brew an old peculier style brew with og 1060. I have all basic equipment, would I be able to brew doing 2 x BIAB batches in my 19ltr pot?

Cheers

Lee

Post #2264 made 14 years ago
Welcome Lee

Being a Northern lad you'll like your beer :thumbs: :thumbs: (I'm originally from darlo)

Have a read up on Maxi-Biab for brewing with a small pot, and post any questions you may have. One of the Maxi Brewing guys will help you out.

Link to interesting threads
Here

Here

and Here

:luck:

Yeasty
Last edited by Yeasty on 11 Feb 2012, 19:50, edited 13 times in total.
Why is everyone talking about "Cheese"
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Post #2266 made 14 years ago
skates wrote:Good day:

I attempted my first BIAB over this last weekend, and I must say, somewhat blindly, as the holy grail of information on this site is not available to those who don't make a "first post"- fortunately, there are enough other open resorces available to make me dangerous in the brewery. I did message an admin for assistance, never heard a word. Perhaps if I turn about three times and spit, the magical permissions will fall from the heavens and I will be allowed to see what we as homebrewers should openly share without condition. Good luck to all...
LOL skates and apologies. Gaining full access to the site atm is a bit awkward at the moment but this will change in time. Thank you for making the effort.

Your original first post contained so many questions that I'd say most existing members were a bit overwhelmed. You'll see however that Yeasty has started a thread in your honour here. I am going to edit that thread now so as none of your questions get lost.

Welcome and thanks to all those who post in this thread. If your questions are not directly answered here, as is common, please feel free to post them on the main board where they certainly won't get lost.

Cheers,
Pat
Last edited by Pat on 12 Feb 2012, 00:49, edited 13 times in total.
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Post #2267 made 14 years ago
Greetings from Michigan, USA!

I have been using BIAB since I got into all-grain several months ago. Apartment living pretty much forced me to go this route, but I really don't see any reason to switch if I could!

I was referred here from a thread on Homebrewtalk.com (can't for the live of me remember who posted it :think: )

Post #2269 made 14 years ago
Good Day Euphist, Welcome to our Site! BAIB really is the way to brew, even if you have an empty warehouse.
We never check references, You will always be welcome to post infromation or ask questions. So if you have something, let us know!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2270 made 14 years ago
Good Day Kingy, Welcome! Everyone is welcome, even people from Newcastle!
Using 3V is understandable, we all make mistakes.
It is great to hear you have seen the light and have come back to BAIB. It really is a great way to brew!
If you have some favorite recipes or have any questions, Please post!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2272 made 14 years ago
Good Day Larry Stephens, Welcome to the site!! Do you mash the 6 row for 45-45 minutes to fully convert the starch??

Do you use flaked rice and corn, or do you cereal mash/(cook) before you mash???

I wonder because that is the same recipe is what 'Hamms" beer used, and it has no Haze??

Have you increased to mashed recipe and skipped the LME?

My questions are because this is a recipe for a Lager made from the 1940's to 1970's in America!!!
Honest Officer, I swear to Drunk, I am Not God.
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2273 made 14 years ago
Greetings manipulators of water, grains, and hops.

1. Where are you from? Los Angeles, California, USA
2. How did you stumble across the site? Most recently and what sealed the deal was Episode 54 of Brewing TV but I have seen a lot of blogs, podcasts, and other brewing resources referencing BIAB
3. What you think of it so far? A little overwhelmed but more excited to reap the rewards of heaps of info.
4. Have you brewed at all before. If so, for how long and what method are you currently using? I have been brewing with my brother for the better part of 3 years but mainly as a helper. We have been all grain since batch #2. Just purchased a second hand 5 gallon set-up and looking forward to doing it myself.
5. Do you work? Are you retired or maybe you run a household? I am a full time construction consultant with a wife and two young sons.

Cheers.
Sam

Post #2274 made 14 years ago
Welcome slamuel,

BIAB is as easy as falling off a horse. It is less painful to boot! There is enough information here to be up and running quickly. Ask if you can't find it!
tap 1 Raspberry wine
tap 2 Bourbon Barrel Porter
tap 3 Czech Pilsner
tap 4 Triple IPA 11% ABV

Pipeline: Mulled Cider 10% ABV

http://cheesestradamus.com/ Brewers challenge!
    • SVA Brewer With Over 100 Brews From United States of America

Post #2275 made 14 years ago
BobBrews wrote:Welcome slamuel,

BIAB is as easy as falling off a horse. It is less painful to boot! There is enough information here to be up and running quickly. Ask if you can't find it!
Thanks BobBrews. Looking forward to it. Now to go check out all those locked materials.
Last edited by slamuel on 13 Feb 2012, 01:55, edited 13 times in total.

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