КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @douglasjohnston4671
    @douglasjohnston4671 Рік тому +6

    I love how honest you were about the second batch that didn't work out. It's really encouraging to see that other brewers don't always get it right either. Thanks for all the amazing content.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      I'm glad you enjoy it so much! Nobody makes perfect beer every time!

  • @Ben54871
    @Ben54871 Рік тому +3

    That's so crazy with the kviek taking off like that! Even though the experiment didn't work out, that's an awesome story and a good look at how homebrewing can go sometimes. Love it!

  • @afhostie
    @afhostie Рік тому +5

    Kinda wish you had recorded yourself tasting the other beer. Thanks for sharing both the things that go right as well as the things that go wrong so that we can learn too. I've been meaning to ask you for a video on how your cleaning process has changed, especially since you have so much more equipment now.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Glad you enjoyed the video, the cleaning hasn't really changed all that much, but I'll consider that.

  • @edbercaw5833
    @edbercaw5833 Рік тому

    Great video once again. It is cool that you include the “fails” of home brewing as well. I like the sound of this recipe. Cheers!

  • @vruychev
    @vruychev Рік тому +5

    That pour! Looks very yummy and judging by the smacking while drinking it, I'd call this one a successful experiment! On a side note, I'd still would have poured the lager yeast on top of the krausen, as this could have been presented as a co-fermentation experiment and may be even a separate video ;-) Cheers, Steve, great video content as always.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it! I did add the lager yeast later once I got the temperature under control, but it didn't do anything unfortunately. The problem was the beer was at 106 F when I went to pitch the yeast and discovered the krausen!

  • @NikitaVorontsov
    @NikitaVorontsov Рік тому +2

    Big fan of Diamond Lager yeast! Allows for some temperature fluctuation and fermenting a bit higher. Looks great, and the pour was excellent!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      My second time using it and both times I was very happy with it! It will certainly be back

  • @oneoeightales2772
    @oneoeightales2772 Рік тому

    I didn't evidently clean my ball valve on my anvil bucket well enough and my cream ale got some of my foraged yeast in it. To my surprise there was a pellicle on the sides of the fermenter once I racked it for bottling. Ran PBW, disassembled, boiled the ball valve and all, then cleaned and passivated the fermenter. Woof.

  • @filmscorefreak
    @filmscorefreak Рік тому

    Been drinking this Weinhestephaner Festbier, delightful stuff! Think I prefer the marzen style, but I can see why this is the chosen beer for the festival. Good video, of course!

  • @hikai5285
    @hikai5285 Рік тому +2

    Prost from Germany! So glad I'm not the only one making mistakes! :-D the beer looks awesome by the way

  • @douglasthomas8513
    @douglasthomas8513 Рік тому +1

    Yet another enjoyable and informative video... and just kegged a Marzen that I slightly modified from your recipe like literally 10min ago 😁. Tasty at 5.8 abv.
    Thanks and keep the videos coming!

  • @jmsnystrom
    @jmsnystrom Рік тому

    Good video! I like that you also educate us of the beers gone bad! 👍

  • @JoeGraves24
    @JoeGraves24 Рік тому

    Since you’ve had the larger system I’ve noticed you have freed the hops. Excellent choice all around sir. Prost!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      It's made a huge difference! Bit a pain in the butt to manage the extra debris but its worth it for flavor!

  • @bradalsop542
    @bradalsop542 Рік тому

    Live and learn from mistakes, haha. Great video! This is one of my all time favorite styles of beer after spending time in the Army over seas. I brew this regularly with a similar recipe and pressure fermented. The main difference is I use 10% munich malt, 10% Vienna and 2% melanoidin. Pressure fermented at 8 psi with Bavarian yeast. Hop schedule is similar. I have never compared it side by side with a traditional lager fermentation but i love the beer. Cheers!

    • @bradalsop542
      @bradalsop542 Рік тому

      Oh, I do also use a water salt profile for a malty beer!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      That might be the way I do this if I go for it a second time next year. Cheers!

  • @ericv00
    @ericv00 Рік тому +1

    I've had a similar issue with Lutra kveik persisting after cleaning. That stuff is heartier than you might expect. On the plus side, I've had a relatively easy time harvesting the yeast and keeping a culture going for more than a year now. Still, cleaning is a bigger pain now than it was before I started using it. That stuff coats every surface of the fermenter and bottles with a sticky film of yeast. ...At least the beers turn out great.

  • @NWsmallbatchBrewing
    @NWsmallbatchBrewing Рік тому

    Issues like the heating pad and the wrong yeast getting happy still helps people know what can happen and how to correct it the next time. So still very valuable for a video. 🙂

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      It happens to everyone, no matterhow long they've been brewing!

  • @NoMusiciansInMusicAnymore
    @NoMusiciansInMusicAnymore Рік тому

    I'm drinking my first smash Helles (Helles Smashed) now, it's pretty amazing! I am definitely interested in giving your Festbier a go though, it looks and sounds great and you totally had me at "like a Helles on steroids"!!

  • @SchmegmaOnToast
    @SchmegmaOnToast Рік тому

    I've fell out of love with lutra which forces my hand towards temperature control. These recipes really are my breaking point in the best way possible

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Its a bit of a tough yeast to get right - certainly not a magic lager maker. But the point is you should do what makes the most sense for you! Cheers!

  • @Peter-Southern-Victoria-Aust
    @Peter-Southern-Victoria-Aust Рік тому +1

    I heard that Saflager Saflager W34 -70 can be fermented reasonably warm temperatures up as high as 22C / 72F in a regular non pressure fermenter so I tried it and I have had good results with no off flavors but I always pressure ferment lagers, I love the deep red color of your beer at the start too, sometimes that red is difficult to achieve.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      This is true, I've taken it up to 68 F comfortably before. Its a great yeast!

  • @TheBruSho
    @TheBruSho Рік тому

    Guess this was the year of Fest mishaps (like me)! But glad you still got something enjoyable out of it, Prost!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      I guess it was!! At least yours was still drinkable haha, cheers Trent!

  • @seatube327
    @seatube327 Рік тому +2

    I'll definitely have to try the Diamond Lager yeast! I'm glad one of them came out right :D I used a Kveik strain once, and my next two batches fermented out in 48 hours and tasted awful. Had to throw all my plastic and rubber parts away and soak everything else in iodophor overnight to get rid of it. Not sure I'll use Kveik again lol

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Quickly became one of my favorite lager yeasts! The kveik van be tricky, needs a lot of nutrients and sometimes needs a higher pitch rate than the internet will tell you

  • @ElementaryBrewingCo
    @ElementaryBrewingCo Рік тому

    Bummer about the Kveik batch, we’ve all been there though. Glad you had another 5 gallons that came out great!!

  • @glutenfreebrewing
    @glutenfreebrewing Рік тому

    That as well as the Marzen look amazing!

  • @thomashamann7035
    @thomashamann7035 Рік тому +1

    A great looking recipe but I'd highly recommend straight Weyermann Barke Pils malt and nothing else. A supercharged Helles is the Oktoberfest Festbier, aimed heavily at drinkability. Every other malt addition leads one again towards the pre 1990 Oktoberfest style. All power to you, bro. Always enjoying your well produced program 🍻

    • @williamburkett7746
      @williamburkett7746 Рік тому

      I'm pretty ignorant on the subject, but what's the difference between pilsner and barke pilsner? Using straight barke pilsner wouldn't just make it a helles?

    • @thomashamann7035
      @thomashamann7035 Рік тому

      @@williamburkett7746 Barke is for me a tastier Pils malt. Using Barke doesn't make every beer a Helles, you could brew a tasty imperial stout with it. My recommendation to use Barke is due to Festbier being a very very light coloured beer and a single malt beer requires the tastiest Pils malt available. Festbier in Germany is simply a higher strength Helles... high 5.0 to low 6.0% ABV.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Thanks for the suggestions, I think you might be right, but I really do like my festbier (as well as my helles) to be a lot maltier than 100% pils. But then again, I have yet to taste either beer in Germany!

  • @joshualarsen9897
    @joshualarsen9897 Рік тому

    Sorry your pressure batch went so poorly, still happy to see the results of the non pressurized fermentation. Very impressive beer, absolutely delicious looking.

  • @1TheLord1
    @1TheLord1 Рік тому

    I think Harvest would work well in this style. I used Biergarten Lager from escarpment lab and it was killer last one I made. Went full decoction and was a bit surprised how much that raised og and fg. Cheers!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Absolutely! I'm pretty sure that's the same strain as Wyeast 2206. Decoction will get you the character you want out of this for sure, it does make an interesting difference sometimes.

  • @nivek204
    @nivek204 Рік тому

    I think S-23 is the same as Diamond lager if you are looking for alternate dry options. Seems to perform about the same as 34/70 at higher temps as well.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Interesting, I hadn't heard that before but S-23 is also supposed to be a Bavarian strain so that makes sense.

  • @Jango1989
    @Jango1989 Рік тому

    Nice recipe and a really delicious looking fest bier! It's great that you show and discuss the mistakes you make. Interesting that you don't use a metal coil + water chiller. Obviously not the most environmentally friendly but I do wonder if cooling quickly and pitching early would have prevented the infection from getting hold. Though given it was in the container it could've just as likely ended up with a mixed fermentation.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      I use a plate chiller instead of an immersion chiller, just about the same amount of water. Problem is the water isn't very cold around here and I am really limited on space.

  • @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496
    @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496 Рік тому

    That's a ton of melanoidin! The color of your fest is almost as dark as my marzen! Great video as usual.

    • @SchmegmaOnToast
      @SchmegmaOnToast Рік тому

      10% isn't unusual

    • @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496
      @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496 Рік тому +1

      @@SchmegmaOnToast yes it is

    • @SchmegmaOnToast
      @SchmegmaOnToast Рік тому

      @@iliffavenuebrewhouse6496 you're right for this style it might be excessive. I've used 10% melanoidin on darker heavier beers before and it yielded a considerable character.

    • @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496
      @iliffavenuebrewhouse6496 Рік тому

      @@SchmegmaOnToast Yes I'm referring specifically to Festbier

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Yeah it was a lot for a festbier, I honestly didnt expect that much color contribution! But I was ultimately curious just how much maltiness it would impart.

  • @ItsReck1
    @ItsReck1 Рік тому

    Lutra 100 percent was stuck in a port. The sample ports on stainless steel conicals are especially notorious for being a safe haven for the yeast lol

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      My thoughts too. I took everything apart, cleaned and boiled them all to be sure after dumping

  • @TheVindalloo
    @TheVindalloo Рік тому

    Great Video. As I live in Munich I know Wiesenbier (as the locals call it) quite well. Yours does look fantastic. On your prenounication of mittelfrüh (mittelfrueh) is pretty good. Just leave the eh at the end out of it, more like mittelfrew. Ue = ü which is a weird ehw ish sound. Cheers

  • @draculasdaughter36
    @draculasdaughter36 Рік тому

    Hope you still do a pressure vs traditional lager vid in the near future 👍🍻

  • @sethb9687
    @sethb9687 11 місяців тому

    Man I wish I could have seen how the pressure fermented beer turned out if it went smooth. I'm about to get started on pressure fermenting. Do you still have to do a diacetyl rest when pressure fermenting? Great video, as always. Thanks.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer 11 місяців тому

      If you're curious, I've got a decent number of videos on the topic so feel free to check those out. I usually don't do a D-rest on pressure fermented lagers, since you're usually fermenting them at D-rest temperatures the whole time.

  • @tyrepair
    @tyrepair Рік тому

    Thank you for making this beer!! It’s too bad about the experiment, but at least the traditional one turned out well!
    I know you mentioned the amount of melanoidin added to the body and maltiness, but I wonder how it would have turned out if you skipped the step mash and just did a single mash in the high 140s-low 150s. But, that’s the joy of homebrewing! As long as you like it, there’s nothing wrong with it being a little “out of spec”!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed the video! I think if I had mashed that way it would be fairly similar

    • @tyrepair
      @tyrepair Рік тому

      Fair enough. So, if you were looking for a result that’s a little closer to style, just cut back on the melanoidin? Otherwise, I’m glad you did make a Festbier! Nothing wrong with a good Märzen, but it would be nice to see a domestic/micro brewery make a Festbier.

  • @DetlefKroeze
    @DetlefKroeze Рік тому

    How does Weyermann Barke Pilsner malt compare with their regular Pilsner in terms of extract yield in your experience? If I need 5 kg of Pilsner to get an OG of 1.050 will 5 kg of Barke get me a similar OG or will it be lower. And I so, how much?
    I've tried to use both Brewer's Friend and Brewfather to try and get an estimate, but they give different answers.

  • @flippy1407
    @flippy1407 Рік тому +1

    Hey great video, do you not normally use the hop spider during the boil? I’ve been worried the hops might clog the pump or affect beer clarity.

    • @Pingwinho
      @Pingwinho Рік тому +1

      You'll be OK up to 200g (I haven't done more). If you use a spider adjust your hop usage by about 10%.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      I just started not using it. I remove the bazooka screen on the kettle outlet and whirlpool my hops and trub before chilling. It works like a charm and I get a ton more hop character out of it.

  • @adamgorka368
    @adamgorka368 Рік тому

    Festbier is perhaps my favourite all time beer. It's got that classic munich taste, but in a full bodied and still sweet way/balanced way. Gotta be careful not to dry out munich lagers too much because when combined with the grainy bitterness of the region's styles, they quickly become (to my taste) way too much, I've even had some commercial helles that despite my love for the style are almost undrinkable for being too dry. I've never had that w festbier tho, always a win.
    Hey also I don't know if you care too much about this, but I like how you put effort in to try to pronounce regional words/names authentically! A couple tips to help your German out (again, if you're interested don't let accent snobs make you feel you need to be); the English "L" sound happens with the tongue between the teeth but in German it's done a bit more upwards above the teeth in the gummy section. It's a subtle thing that can make a big difference since it can sorta impact how you pronounce vowels, in a good way (as you get used to it). Also, when you read "ue" in a word, it means ü. Ue is the historical way of writing it (some places like Switzerland still use the old way of writing). Hallertau Mittelfrueh = Hallertau Mittelfrüh. I think the change makes reading in German a little more intuitive because you can stick strictly to the rule that every vowel and consonant gets pronounced, as I've heard you do. And finally R's come from the throat, which admittedly can create challenges when followed by sounds like ü which isnt common in english. When in doubt, the audio/auto text to voice in Google Translate is actually pretty good! aside from accounting for regional differences.
    Cheers from Canada (not Germany lol)

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Glad you enjoyed the video and thank you for the pronunciation tips!

  • @k-daddy5598
    @k-daddy5598 Рік тому

    Going to brew this, thanks. Did you mash in with hotter strike water in order to settle at 146F or just add the grains to 146F water and bring it up from there?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Since my system recirculates and balances out quickly, I usually just mash in at the intended rest temp and let it come back up.

  • @jasongarland3165
    @jasongarland3165 Рік тому

    You've gotta disassemble those valves each time! I know it's a PIA but PBW doesn't get everywhere. You might also want to douse the fermenter with fresh Iodaphor before adding more wort. Also, try recirculating water through an ice bath. We do that down here in the warm parts of the year because ambient temp at the faucet is usually in the 80's.
    Otherwise, I laughed at the honesty! We've all been there. I had to dump a damn good saison last year because a wild yeast took over before I pitched it. Smelled like wet cat food... blehk....

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Thanks for watching! Yeah I usually do but the one time I didnt...of course

  • @vijayramachandran3559
    @vijayramachandran3559 Рік тому

    Perhaps the second malt rest also added to the maltiness?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Perhaps, but I still feel my huge melanoidin malt addition is to blame

  • @richtygart6855
    @richtygart6855 Рік тому

    The best ale is Rogue Hazelnut Brown Nectar.

  • @franes6305
    @franes6305 Рік тому

    Hey, great video as always :) I would just like to ask on some tip how you measure PH? I bought PH meter but i am not sure am I supposed to cool sample down as it takes a lot of time or just dip it in at mash temp? Its not related to video I know, but i could use some input as im new to water chemistry.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      I measure at mash temperature but I take a sample instead of putting the pH meter directly in. There's a debate as to whether or not to cool it down, but every time I've gotten the correct pH at mash temp, the beer turns out the way its supposed to. Just be sure to keep the pH meter calibrated.

    • @franes6305
      @franes6305 Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer ok thanks! This will be much easier, as the first time I was waiting for it to cool down and got very low efficency... But pH was off so I guess that was the problem... Anyways thanks and thanks for ur time u put into this videos I learned a lot from you

  • @ad.ke.7224
    @ad.ke.7224 Рік тому +1

    Nice video. I would reduce the second rest by 15 minutes and maybe mash out at 77 °C without resting. After resting 30 minutes at 71 °C the starch should be broken down into sugars. This increases drinkability. Prost from Germany.

    • @Tomtiburon
      @Tomtiburon Рік тому

      Genau 😉

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Are you saying that spending too much time in that zone is hurting the drinkability? I just wanted to be sure I had completed conversion without doing a starch test. My system will go from 71 to 77 C in about 3 minutes so thats why I'm a bit more deliberate about resting there for a bit.

    • @ad.ke.7224
      @ad.ke.7224 Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer The conversion of starch to sugar can be completed after 15 minutes at around 71 °C yet. 30 minutes is a safe time without checking the conversion. It also will produce a balanced beer. The longer you rest at 71 °C the more unfermentable sugar is produced and the beer gets sweeter and more full bodied. When you rest at 77 °C it will have a similar effect to the body. You could try to rest 20 minutes at 71 and 77 °C as well for a balanced beer. I look at it like a fader between alpha and beta-amylase dividing the minutes you need to convert the starch. Starch is not unlimited, the longer you rest at 63 °C the less starch is left for the alpha-amylase.

  • @adamgodofwar666
    @adamgodofwar666 Рік тому

    When you add sodium chloride, what brand do you use? Or what kind maybe is a better question. I know it's just table salt but there are a million kinds. To me they all taste....salty but im new to building water so I was just wondering which salt you prefer

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      It's important to use non iodized table salt. I use Mortons kosher salt

  • @coryrobertson8450
    @coryrobertson8450 Рік тому

    I noticed you pitched hops right into the boil kettle loose. I've done this on the 10g system and the screen gets horribly clogged, making cooling and transferring very difficult. Does the 20g system have a screen over the bottom port in the kettle? Curious how you solved for the clogging issue with the system. Thanks, and love the channel!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Correct. I removed the bazooka screen for that reason. I whirlpool the hops and trub now before chilling with the spincycle whirlpool arm and it works like a charm. I get so much more hop character than I used to.

  • @JohnL9013
    @JohnL9013 Рік тому

    Do you do a forced diacetyl test before kegging beers like this (pull two samples, nuke one in the microwave until it's hot ~150°F, then cool both and compare) and did you do one before you kegged this beer?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      I didn't think of trying that, that's a very interesting technique!

  • @Thegoatbirdman
    @Thegoatbirdman 4 місяці тому

    Hey, I’m brewing a Marzen right now based off one of your recipes. When you say 70-80% attenuation, is that 70% of the OG or 70% of the expected difference in gravity?

  • @TravGnome
    @TravGnome Рік тому

    Are you using the plate chiller that comes with the 20g 240v system? I saw you throw the hops in without using the hop spiders, I haven't taken that leap of "not going to clog the plate chiller" trust yet - any issues with clogging of the plate chiller and the free-floating hops?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Yes. I now conduct a whirlpool to pile trub and hop debris in the center before initiating the chill. I have yet to clog the plate chiller, although sometimes if I don't do a good whirlpool it will slow the flow down

    • @TravGnome
      @TravGnome Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer can I assume you don't run boiling wort through the chiller to sanitize it? I'm seriously looking to go the free hop route as soon as today's brew, just want to understand what I may be looking at as far as complications and things I can do to minimize them. Thanks and keep up the great work!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      So far I've had luck running a quick burst of boiling wort through the chiller somewhere around the 5-10 minutes mark before ending the boil. Due to the boil intensity, most of the hop matter is circulating around still at that point and not piling up at the bottom. However if you are concerned, you could always use sanitizer or run boiling hop free wort through at the beginning of the boil. Three things that are important: 1 - remove the bazooka screen because that will clog well before your chiller, and 2 - try to setup a 3-way valve that will bypass your chiller and go straight to the whirlpool arm to perform the whirlpool with. 3 - whirlpool for 3 min, then turn off the pump and let it sit for 15 min. This will pile the trub up neatly in the center of the kettle

    • @TravGnome
      @TravGnome Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer I'll give the whole suggestion a try, thank you!

  • @saladaufdieeichel
    @saladaufdieeichel Рік тому

    Seems like u really got stuck in those European lager styles. Would love to take u around some places in Germany and Austria to try some outstanding lagers. My recommendation is the area around Bamberg (which has a world cultral hertiage old town centre) for Kellerbiers and Franconian Lagers.

  • @jackhandy7237
    @jackhandy7237 Рік тому

    Hey AB, great video! I noticed you don’t use a hop spider in your brew kettle and you put the hops right in. Any special reason for not using one?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Thats right, I whirlpool them into the center of the kettle now and it gives a much better hop character to the beer

    • @jackhandy7237
      @jackhandy7237 Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer - Yeah, I find I’m not getting much hop flavor or aroma from my hops. How did you work around that when you did use your hop spider? Did you double your hop amounts?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      I got the bitterness but not as much flavor. There's a rule of thumb that says increase hols by 10% when using a hop spider, it's probably better to go up to 25%

    • @jackhandy7237
      @jackhandy7237 Рік тому

      @@TheApartmentBrewer - I just tried a beer that I did a hop stand on using almost double the hops in again I got barely any hop aroma. I think going forward, for flavor and aroma Ho additions, I’m just gonna have to put the hops directly into the kettle and not in the spider. I’m just worried about getting hop particles stuck in the plate chiller, causing infection later on down the line in another batch. Do you still use the plate chiller?

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Yes I still use it. It occasionally will get clogged but I've never gotten an infection from it.

  • @manueldiaz9460
    @manueldiaz9460 Рік тому

    When you say you "rest the mash", do you resirculate? Or just leave it to rest?

  • @fenchurchmarie5224
    @fenchurchmarie5224 Рік тому

    wait, I'm only #268 to like this?!?
    y'all are crazy, this is GOOD CONTENT!

  • @smellsamazing
    @smellsamazing Рік тому

    Nice video as always. Why don’t you put the weights in kgs and grams as well? You do convert the temperatures…
    Would make it easier and more enjoyable for anyone who’s not in your country.

    • @DenkerNZ
      @DenkerNZ Рік тому +1

      Because the weights mean nothing when recreating a recipe. Just use the percentages and scale to your system and efficiency.

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому +1

      Yup, grams are in there for hops and water additions, liters for volumes, temps are also in Celsius. Scale your grain according to the percentage displayed. I take care of the rest of the world just fine.

  • @Bullsbrew551
    @Bullsbrew551 Рік тому

    It’s a shame one beer was ruined but one out of two ain’t bad. Prost🍻

  • @fenchurchmarie5224
    @fenchurchmarie5224 Рік тому

    d00d.... if you weren't tipsy during the intro you faked it very well!
    great video!

    • @TheApartmentBrewer
      @TheApartmentBrewer Рік тому

      Haha I think I was actually trying to hide it but looks like it added to the video lol.

  • @tommanning7337
    @tommanning7337 Рік тому

    😎👍🏻👍🏻🍺🍺

  • @markm1514
    @markm1514 11 місяців тому

    The answer is, ja.

  • @ovsjahschweinefresser5293
    @ovsjahschweinefresser5293 Рік тому

    Everybody knows that stout is the best beer.

  • @daniloarq
    @daniloarq 6 місяців тому

    No vienna malt? Sorry, it is not a festbier. Looks good but not a traditional one.