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re: Homebrewing Thread: Volume II

Posted on 4/26/16 at 11:48 am to
Posted by LSUBoo
Knoxville, TN
Member since Mar 2006
101930 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 11:48 am to
quote:

Anyone here go straight to all grain brewing and skip past extract all together?


Not I.

Don't know what my next beer is going to be... probably will get something brewing this weekend at some point though.
Posted by LSUGrad00
Member since Dec 2003
2428 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 11:59 am to
quote:

Anyone here go straight to all grain brewing and skip past extract all together?


Nope, I brewed two extract batches before switching to all grain.
Posted by LSURoss
SWLAish
Member since Dec 2007
15429 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 12:10 pm to
I did 1 extract and switched but had a little bit of experience with the process before I actually started homebrewing. Extract is not a bad thing to get started with, however
Posted by BeerMoney
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2012
8397 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 12:10 pm to
I did. Years later I use a good bit of extract to make up for efficiency woes and to brew 10 gallon batches that won't fit in my mash tun.
Posted by LoneStarTiger
Lone Star State
Member since Aug 2004
15954 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 12:21 pm to
quote:

go straight to all grain brewing and skip past extract


not me, and if I had it to do all over, I would start with extract again.


do any of you have advice on how much ginger to use in a beer?
This post was edited on 4/26/16 at 12:24 pm
Posted by BMoney
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2005
16279 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 1:25 pm to
quote:

do any of you have advice on how much ginger to use in a beer?


None.

You're welcome.
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
27161 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 1:45 pm to
I brewed a ginger saison a month ago and used .75 oz of fresh minced ginger at 5 minutes. Perfect amount for what I was going with. It's similar ginger levels to a good ginger ale.
Posted by LoneStarTiger
Lone Star State
Member since Aug 2004
15954 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 1:50 pm to
quote:

None. You're welcome.




quote:

I brewed a ginger saison a month ago and used .75 oz of fresh minced ginger at 5 minutes. Perfect amount for what I was going with. It's similar ginger levels to a good ginger ale.


Perfect, thanks!
Posted by LSUGrad00
Member since Dec 2003
2428 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 2:11 pm to
quote:

do any of you have advice on how much ginger to use in a beer?


None.



Can we add this to the FAQ in the first post?
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
27161 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 2:13 pm to
You people are crazy. Ginger is great!
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
52920 posts
Posted on 4/26/16 at 3:34 pm to
quote:

Anyone here go straight to all grain brewing and skip past extract all together?


No. I did about 7 batches (2 were dumps) before i went all grain. I will say. When buying equipment, buy your brewpot with the plan to go all grain, so aim for a 10 gallon brewpot.
Posted by LSUGrad00
Member since Dec 2003
2428 posts
Posted on 4/27/16 at 8:12 am to
quote:

When buying equipment, buy your brewpot with the plan to go all grain, so aim for a 10 gallon brewpot.


This is good advice...

When I first started I purchased a 6G brew pot because the extract recipes were 3G boils. After the first two batches I had to turn around and buy a large pot for full boils.
Posted by BeerMoney
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2012
8397 posts
Posted on 4/27/16 at 9:15 am to
15 gallon pot. 10 gallon is good for nothing but 5 gallon batches. With the 15 gallon pot you can do 5 gallons or the occasional 10 for not much difference in cost.
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
52920 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 7:22 am to
So i'll be doing my first testing of my sour i brewed about 7 weeks ago. Will be testing ph, gravity, and taste to see what is going on with it. Whenever i first pitched everything i got a good head of krausen. Curious to see how the beer is coming along.
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
52920 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 7:55 am to
Also, an equipment question.

I have this setup on my kegerator system



I will be looking to add a 3rd keg to my fridge, thus i need either a 3rd regulator or one of these



How do i connect either a 3rd regulator or this air distributor to my already existing 2 tap regulator system? Is there additional hardware i need to purchase?

When it comes time to buy, i'll probably just call up keg connections, just wondering if anyone has experience adding a line to their keg system.
Posted by LSUGrad00
Member since Dec 2003
2428 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 8:06 am to
The cheap way is to plug something like this into one of the secondary regulators..



The more expensive way would be to purchase a single secondary regulator and add it to the end of your existing bank of secondary regulators.


ETA: When I expanded; I added a manifold like is pictured above.

I have the manifold attached to one of the secondary regulators and all of my serving kegs are
attached to it.

The second regulator I use for force carbonation, bottling, CO2 purge, and a few other things.
This post was edited on 4/29/16 at 8:09 am
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
52920 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 8:28 am to
I'm more wondering about installation. Do i need to take the barb off the regulators to add a 3rd regualator or an air distributor?

Also, i'm liking the idea of using the distributor. I can carbonate to whatever level i want with one regulator, then set the other regulator with the distributor to a standard carb level or to serving pressure.
This post was edited on 4/29/16 at 8:30 am
Posted by LSUGrad00
Member since Dec 2003
2428 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 8:54 am to
quote:

I'm more wondering about installation. Do i need to take the barb off the regulators to add a 3rd regualator or an air distributor?


If you are using a gas manifold like in the picture I attached you just run a length of gas tubing from the bottom of one of your regulators to the barb on the side of the gas manifold.

If you are adding a third secondary regulator, you will need the new secondary regulator and a nipple. Remove the plug nut from the end of your secondary bank, add nipple, add new regulator, add plug nut to the opposite side of new regulator.


Nipple


Plug Nut
Posted by Fratastic423
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2007
5990 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 9:01 am to
quote:

'm more wondering about installation. Do i need to take the barb off the regulators to add a 3rd regualator or an air distributor?


If you are going to add a new regulator onto your 2 regulator system there should be a nut on the end of your regulator currently that will come out (maybe with some force). and then you can buy a middle piece to connect the new regulator to your current bank.
Posted by LSUBoo
Knoxville, TN
Member since Mar 2006
101930 posts
Posted on 4/29/16 at 9:10 am to
Unless you're planning on serving beers at three different pressures or carbonating multiple kegs while you also have some set up to serve, why add another regulator? Would probably be much cheaper to just connect one of your current ones to a 2-port manifold, and then you can use those two lines to serve beer and if you need to carbonate you can use your stand-alone regulator/line for that purpose.

I do all my serving/carbonating with a single regulator and a 4-port manifold, just close off the valves to already carbonated kegs and bump up the pressure, then drop it back down to serve. Admittedly I do have a backup CO2 tank & regulator so if I really needed to separate pressures I could.
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