Right...beginners forum...sorry.What in the heck does all that mean, I’m new at this haha, got any other pointers?
Right...beginners forum...sorry.
I don't know what OG you're shooting for on your RIS, but the one I did was right at 1.100 gravity to start. A couple of weeks before I made the RIS, I had brewed up a low-gravity blonde ale with a single packet of Fermentis S-04 dry yeast to build up a larger colony of yeast. I racked the blonde out of the carboy and left the yeast and, after cooling, put the RIS right from the boil pot and into the fermenter on top of the fresh yeast sediment (called yeast cake or slurry or trub).
Even though it was a huge beer, there was enough yeast built up - probably about 4 times the original cell count in the packet of dry yeast - that it started fermenting very quickly and finished within a few days, at least in terms of reaching FG, final gravity. It aged for a while after that, of course but the yeast did its job pretty quickly. The attenuation (how much of the sugar in the wort the yeast was able to turn into alcohol) was about 75%. That's fairly typical for a lot of English yeast strains and good attenuation for a high-gravity beer like this and the ABV of the final beer was around 10%.
Batch size and OG are the determining factors for how much yeast. Being that you're new, I'd suggest dry yeast because you can simply pitch more than one packet if you don't have any way to make a starter or harvest/repitch yeast from a previous brew.
Hope that's more helpful.![]()
FWH with extract is actually pretty easy: You mix up your wort at about mash temperature, say 165 degrees then add hops. Wait a while, then start boiling. Easy-peasy.Regarding the recipe, you're using First Wort hop additions and that's not something that you can really do with extract brewing. Figure out your actual boil time and use the boil setting for hop additions to get an accurate IBU calculation. There's no need to boil amber and Dark Extracts for a full 60 minutes. I'd do 30 or maybe 45 at most for decent hop uptake.
I'd use more Crystal in the steeping grains. You've got mostly roasted\burnt malts and you'll need a lot more Cara/Crystal type malt to soften the feel and add body. Consider adding some C-40 or even lighter for flavor and dextrines.
FWH with extract is actually pretty easy: You mix up your wort at about mash temperature, say 165 degrees then add hops. Wait a while, then start boiling. Easy-peasy.
There is that....Fair enough...just complicates the process for an inexperienced brewer and makes IBUs harder to calculate.
I already got that bad girl fermenting, can i still add water?Just dillute to the proper OG...A little water ain't gonna scare anything out of a beer that big. Check the boiloff and dilution calculator in the tools section and it'll tell you exactly how much to add.