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Do you have any brewing tips? |
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Ten Tips to Help You Brew a
Better Beer:
- Use High Quality, Fresh Ingredients
- Fresh
ingredients make better homebrew. If you started with dry yeast, move
up to liquid yeast. If you are an extract brewer, look for fresh
extract rather than a can that is several years old. Store liquid yeast
in the refrigerator, grains in a cool dry place, and hops in the
freezer. Hops, dry malt, yeast, liquid malt and crushed grains all have
a limited shelf life and must be used quickly. Crushed grains, dry malt
and liquid malt will oxidize over time.
- Do your Homework - Designing
great beer is one
part science and one part art. Why guess on the science part? Switching
to brewing software like BeerSmith
can
make a difference in your brewing as it gives you the opportunity to
calculate the color, bitterness and original gravity up front to match
your brewing style. As I brewed more, I started reading top brewing
books, engaging in discussion forums and browsing the internet for
brewing resources. All of these sources, combined with experience and
experimentation dramatically impacted my brewing style and consistency
in a search for brewing perfection.
- Keep It Clean - Anything that
touches your beer
after it has started cooling must be sanitized using any of the popular
sanitizing solutions (bleach, iodophor, etc). The period immediately
after you cool your beer is particularly critical as bacteria and other
infections are most likely to take hold before the yeast has started
fermentation.
- Cool the Wort Quickly -
Cooling your beer quickly
will increase the fallout of proteins and tannins that are bad for your
beer and will also reduce the chance of infection. An immersion wort
chiller is a relatively inexpensive investment that will improve the
clarity and quality of your beer. Cooling is particularly important for
full batch boils.
- Boil for 60-90 Minutes -
Boiling your wort
performs several important functions. It sterilizes your wort,
vaporizes many undesirable compounds, releases bittering oils from the
hops and coagulates proteins and tannins from the grains so they can
fall out during cooling. To achieve all of these noble goals you need
to boil for at least 60 minutes, and for lighter styles of beers a
longer boil of 90 minutes is desirable.
- Control Fermentation Temperature
- Though few
brewers have dedicated fermentation refrigerators, there are simple
methods you can use to maintain a constant temperature for ales during
fermentation. The best technique I’ve seen is to pick a cool, dry area
in your home and then wrap the fermentor in wet towels and place a fan
in front of it. Wet the towels every 12 hours or so, and you should get
a steady fermentation temperature in the 66-68F range. Most brewing
shops sell stick-on thermometers that can be attached to your
fermentation vessel to monitor the temperature.
- Switch to a Full Batch Boil -
Boiling all of your
wort will benefit to your beer. If you are only boiling 2-3 gallons of
a 5 gallon batch, then you are not getting the full benefits of a 60-90
minute boil. The purchase of a 7-12 gallon brew pot and (highly
recommended) outdoor propane burner (which will make the spouse happy
as you now brew outside) are great intermediate steps for moving to
all-grain brewing and the full boils will improve your beer.
- Use Glass Fermenters - Glass
carboys (or
stainless) fermenters offer significant advantages over the typical
plastic bucket. First they are much easier to clean and sterilize.
Second, glass (or stainless) provides a 100% oxygen barrier, where
plastic buckets are porous and can leak oxygen if stored for long
periods. Third, plastic fermenters often have very poor seals around
the top of the bucket and can leak in both directions making it
difficult to determine when fermentation has actually completed. A 5
gallon glass carboy will do the job better, and is available at a very
reasonable price from most stores.
- Make a Yeast Starter - While
pitching directly
from a tube or packet of liquid yeast is OK, your beer will ferment
better if you make a yeast starter first. Boil up a small amount of
dried malt extract in a quart of water with 1/4 oz of yeast. Cool it
well and then pitch your yeast into it 2-3 days before you brew.
Install some foil or an airlock over it and place it in a cool dark
location. When brew day comes, pitching your starter will result in a
quicker start and less risk of infection or off flavors.
- Make Long Term Purchases - You
may have started
brewing with an off-the-shelf kit, but if you enjoy brewing then you
are best off making long term purchases rather than a series of short
term purchases. For example, early on I bought a 3 gallon pot, then a 5
gallon pot, then an 8 gallon enamel pot and finally a 9 gallon
stainless. It would have been much cheaper to jump to the 9 gallon
stainless after the 3 gallon pot. Similarly I’ve had several sizes of
immersion chillers, finally settling on a two stage 3/8″ diameter
copper coil. If you instead make long term purchases (a good pot, a
good chiller, glass carboys, a nice mash tun/cooler) you will save a
lot of money in the long run.
**Tips provided by Brad Smith author of BeerSmith
brewing software
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