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HOMEBREW Digest #0694
This file received at Mthvax.CS.Miami.EDU 91/08/05 03:04:58
HOMEBREW Digest #694 Mon 05 August 1991
FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Rob Gardner, Digest Coordinator
Contents:
Dry Hopping (Jim Grady)
Sparging Success and Mashing Advice ("Justin A. Aborn")
Re : Mashing, Dextrins, and American Lager Stats. (Conn Copas)
Re: Yeast (Carl West)
CHRISTMAS ALE (card)
Another request for German brewpubs/taverns (VLD/VMB) <tfisher@BRL.MIL>
HARLEY DAVIDSON (card)
Bitberger 5 l. keglets. ("DRCV06::GRAHAM")
More Recipe Requests... ("Jeff Brendle")
Phil Fleming's X-mas Ale Recipe (STROUD)
dry hopping in the keg (Marty Albini)
In defense of M&F (korz)
Re: Dry-hopping (korz)
RE: XMas Ale Recipe (Chris Quint)
Loony Alert! (Ron Rader)
schmod (adams)
Pressure Boiling (C.R. Saikley)
Plastic fermentation vessels (jmaessen)
homebrewing and drinking in the third world (Steve Bagley)
Extract (nnieuwej)
Re: pressure cooker for aromatics (Conn Copas)
re: $$ for micro/brewpub (Darryl Richman)
re: Malt Aromatics (Darryl Richman)
re: Malt Aromatics (Darryl Richman)
CABA Contest (MIKE LIGAS)
Re: My Zymurgy hasn't shown up yet. (Clarence Dold)
Send submissions to homebrew%hpfcmi@hplabs.hp.com
Send requests to homebrew-request%hpfcmi@hplabs.hp.com
[Please do not send me requests for back issues]
Archives are available from netlib@mthvax.cs.miami.edu
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Date: Fri, 2 Aug 91 7:21:59 EDT
From: Jim Grady <jimg@hpwald.wal.hp.com>
Subject: Dry Hopping
In HDB #693 Tom Bower asks:
> 1.) How do you keep your brew from becoming infected when dry-hopping?
I've been wondering this too. I assume it is the hops themselves. After
all, one of the reasons hops are added (or why they were added originally)
is because of their qualities as a preservative. Is this right?
- --
Jim Grady |
Internet: jimg@hpwala.wal.hp.com | "Better thin beer than an empty jug"
Phone: (617) 290-3409 | - Danish Proverb
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 2 Aug 91 8:15:43 EDT
From: "Justin A. Aborn" <jaborn@BBN.COM>
Subject: Sparging Success and Mashing Advice
I saw the posting about Kurt Swanson's all grain experience and
the sparging part sounded familiar.
A while ago I posted a message complaining about murky sparge
runnings and I mused about adding a peristaltic pump to the
process. Don't bother. I think my problem was the sparge bag.
It did not tightly contact the sides of my lauter tun and I think
that the wort was leaking out the sides of the bag rather than
running through the full eight inches of grain husks.
I bought another plastic pail that fit into my first pail. The
first pail has the spigot. I drilled a bizillion 1/16" holes
into the new pail, and installed the new holy pail inside the
spigoted pail. This makes one great lauter tun. The first time
I used it I got bright and clear wort after just three sauce pans
worth of recycling. Sparging still takes an hour though.
I have used the new lauter tun three times. Once I had a bad
grain crush that caused foggy runnings. The grain was not
crushed enough. There were many even uncracked grains. This
batch did not run bright and clear. The wort ran very quickly
through the grain bed and stayed foggy. Watch your crushes.
I am drinking my original sparge bag beer these days and it is
quite delicious despite the lack of perfect clarity. Don't toss
those foggy runnings!
Justin
Brewer and Patriot
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 27 Jul 1991 05:16:25 +0000
From: Conn Copas <C.V.Copas%loughborough.ac.uk@hplb.hpl.hp.com>
Subject: Re : Mashing, Dextrins, and American Lager Stats.
Don't care what the textbooks say, I have always found the effects of both
temperature and pH to have relatively little influence on dextrin content.
A prolonged, dilute mash is a much more effective way of achieving a dry
beer, if you like that sort of thing.
Conn V Copas tel : (0509)263171 ext 4164
Loughborough University of Technology fax : (0509)610815
Computer-Human Interaction Research Centre
Leicestershire LE11 3TU e-mail -
G Britain (Janet):C.V.Copas@uk.ac.lut
(Internet):C.V.Copas%lut.ac.uk@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 2 Aug 91 09:38:44 EDT
From: eisen@kopf.HQ.Ileaf.COM (Carl West)
Subject: Re: Yeast
Walter H. Gude asks:
>What if, rather than take the slurry out of the primary, I put new wort into
>the primary.