Happy Monday everyone (well, anyone I guess),
As promised/threatened the other day I'm giving a quick write up of my last brew, a clone of Tiny Rebel Urban IPA which I got from the Malt Miller / Jon Finch. I didn't think to take any photos at the time so you'll just have to imagine what it all looked like.
Selection
I chose this because...it was pretty straightforward to buy and make and looks like it should be a good brew. I was doing a Malt Miller order and was about 8 quid short of the free delivery value so used this to justify spending an extra £18 on this recipe. Also of benefit is that the fine folk at MM weigh out all the ingredients and put it in a bag for you, meaning my usual malt weighing technique of 500g at a time on the kitchen scales was not needed. Also bonus points for the lack of malt dust (does that have a name?) that this weighing technique inevitably spreads round the kitchen. I love the malty smell but other members of my family are less keen.
Anyway, here's the MM link
https://www.themaltmiller.co.uk/product/tiny-rebel-urban-ipa-jon-finch/
Looks like a pretty decent recipe - lots of Big C hops which are usually pretty good, also Safeale 04 yeast which is becoming my go to, largely based on it being fairly cheap on a well known online retailer.
Brewday - more on the brew set up is here
I fired the kettle up slightly apprehensively as I'd got a mild electric shock off the casing on the last brew I did. This seemed to be due to the (very old) extension cable I was using as opposed to the kettle itself so I replaced the cable and all seems to be well. No shocks of any kind :)
The bag being preweighed saved a chore as above so I heated the mash water in the kettle. I've found adding the water to the grain is more efficient than the other way round so did my usual pouring out of the water at strike temp into an empty FV, putting the mesh bag with the grain in the kettle and then pouring the FV back into the kettle.
Nothing to report on the mash; I heated the sparge water as usual on the hob and then sparged after an hour. A side note but my brew set up is pretty inefficient, I usually miss OG by several points, today was no exception. I'm certain it's due to an inefficient sparge technique.
Again fairly straightforward on the boil, a bit complicated at the end with regular hop additions over the last 15 minutes but I'm not a total chump, I can weigh things out and make sure I put them in the kettle at five minute intervals.
The flame out hops stood for about 10 mins - no real idea of if/how they contribute any IBUs or if the length of time has an impact.
Then cooled overnight on the patio and yeast pitched the following morning at an OG of 1040 vs the recipe of 1051. A bit of a miss but hopefully won't impact flavour too much and will make it a sessionable 3.9%.
Three days on from pitching the yeast and it's at 1012 so pretty much there in terms of Primary Fermentation. I'll leave it a few more days before dry hopping. Here's a snap of the vessel and sample taken just now:
The sample is a bit bitter at the moment, hoping that drops off as Primary continues and dry hops go in. I'm on the fence about re-racking before Dry Hopping on the basis of it being a hassle but I think I'll end up going for it as there is a decent inch of sediment at the base of the FV as you can see from the snap.
I'll keep you posted as to how it goes!
Happy Monday
Dave