1. I assembled most of my gear the night before - i.e.:
- a second hand Crown Urn wrapped in old carpet
- rigged up a hoist
- stitched up a bag - 1.5 m diameter circle of voile with clips stitched around the top
- Temperature controller - cheap $20 job - calibrated !!!
3. When the urn hit 66 C I put in the bag, gave the water a good stir, turned it off, threw a few more towels over it and left it for half an hour monitoring the temperature. Why? because I hadnt used any of the equipment yet and I had no idea how stable the mash would be etc - turned out to be pretty good (lost .5 C)
4. Pushed the temperature up to 68 C poured in the grain, gave it a good stir, whacked on the lid, checked temperature - 66 C perfect! threw towels on. Easy!
5. Started to construct a chiller. Oh yeah about that... Was going to no-chill but at the last minute thought it'd be better to chill (in my infinite lack of experience
6. While the above was happening, I nipped back to the mash every 15 minutes, gave it a good stir, took SG readings, adjusted the temperature (as necessary). Stable temperature, gravity increasing, mash going like clockwork - yay...
7. After 60 mins, cranked up the heat, to 78 degrees for mashout, stirring every minute or two.
8. Got to mash out, clipped the bag onto the hoist, hoisted it up, and ... where the F*"& am I meant to tie this thing off? didn't think of that. Luckily I can think on my toes and realised that I was far heavier than the bag so simply stood on the end of the hoist cord! This worked perfectly while I did another gravity reading. Then I walked over to crank up the temperature controller and there was a big splash, funny that
9. Luckily no harm done, albeit my nice clean work area was now a little sticky. Hoisted the bag out and into a bucket, gave it a good squeeze, swore, put gloves on and tried again. Sparged with a bit of hot water, then took the grain out to the chooks.
10. Added the liquid from the bucked back to the urn, got it up to a boil, checked the gravity, didn't think to check the volume
11. The boil was relatively un-eventful except that the second and subsequent hop additions were a bit tricky as I only had 1 hop bag so had to keep fishing it out, opening it, adding more hops etc. They should put a HOT sign on those bags. The uneventful boil also gave me a chance to finish my chiller, and finish getting the yeast ready etc.
12. Boil finished, pulled the plug out, carried the hot urn over to the chiller (I know!), chucked it in and cranked it up. Beautiful!, except water spraying everywhere and some other highly technical stuff that is far to complicated :oops: to expain here...
13. ripped out the chiller, and put the urn on a concrete slab with the lid half on, coiled up the garden hose and tossed that in. MUST CHILL! Once again I Know - should have just returned to the boil then no-chilled.
14. finally got the bloody beer into the fermenter, realised I only had 15 L, so by the time I topped up it was cool enough to pitch yeast.
15. did a final gravity reading and not sure how, but it was spot on!
Checked the brew this morning and it was happly bubbling away, tasted good (no evil signs of infection, but time will tell).
So in hindsight the brew day went exactly to plan (where I followed the plan) with only a few minor ergonomic annoyances which I will correct for next time. The bit that went pear shaped is when I radically changed the plan and decided to increase the complexity and use another method (new to me) without proofing it first! If you read the post carefully you can probably see where I went wrong...
All in all, I had fun and will be adjusting my next brew to account for what I have learnt... Now to go and have a beer :D
cheers
Widdley