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Crushing grains
Crushing grains
I have a really stupid question.... do ALL grains need to be crushed? I just bought a couple of books (Clone Brews and Beer Captured) because the recipes are written with the extract brewer in mind (me). It says to steep your grains... I'm guessing all grains need to be crushed in a mill first, but I just wanted to ask to be 110% sure I should be buying a grain mill.
Thanks.
Jess
Thanks.
Jess
I don't do partial mash brewing, but if I've got it right you can steep the grain in a grain bag (with the grains packed somewhat loosely). I believe you steep them in a separate pot at 150F for about an hour, then pour the liquid in with the rest of your wort. Last month's BYO recommended that you do not squeeze the grain bag to maximize extraction as this will release unwanted "stuff" into your wort. It said to sparge the bag with 170F water to get the last bit fermentable material out.
- markaberrant
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- cannondale
- Bar Fly
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Is it really necessary to invest in a grain mill just for crushing a small amount of specialty grains for steeping? I've done it manually for just a pound or two. Or maybe even a quick zip in a kitchen electronic chopping type gizmo? Certainly particle size is not as important as it is when you are mashing, no?
On the other hand, if you plan to eventually move to all grain, may as well buy the mill now.
On the other hand, if you plan to eventually move to all grain, may as well buy the mill now.
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
A Grain mill is an essential tool.
I'd highly reccomend buying one.
I'd highly reccomend buying one.
Ian Guénard
http://www.bieresetplaisirs.com/index.php
http://www.bieresetplaisirs.com/index.php
Years ago I mail-ordered specialty grains that weren't locally available. I tried crushing them (with a hammer) in a ziplock freezer bag, but it didn't work so well. There wasn't much, so I just ground them up in a coffee grinder & added them to the mash. It's such a small portion, it'll get filtered by the rest of the mash anyway.cannondale wrote:Is it really necessary to invest in a grain mill just for crushing a small amount of specialty grains for steeping? I've done it manually for just a pound or two. Or maybe even a quick zip in a kitchen electronic chopping type gizmo? Certainly particle size is not as important as it is when you are mashing, no?
On the other hand, if you plan to eventually move to all grain, may as well buy the mill now.
I should really buy a mill someday.
- markaberrant
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- grub
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yeah, a barleycrusher is great. i waited a while to get one, citing cost as a big reason. but in the end it was roughly $125 with shipping, saved oodles of cash by gaining 10-15% efficiency (an instant 10-15% savings on grain) and allowing us to buy in bulk (a much larger savings). like mark said, it easily paid for itself in that first year.
oh yeah, and motorizing it means that it crushes 10# in the blink of an eye rather than cranking a corona for an hour. i remember the days when we'd have 40-50# to mill on the corona and spend half the day working on that...
oh yeah, and motorizing it means that it crushes 10# in the blink of an eye rather than cranking a corona for an hour. i remember the days when we'd have 40-50# to mill on the corona and spend half the day working on that...
- cannondale
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Any recommendations on the best choice/source for a motor/grain mill?grub wrote:oh yeah, and motorizing it means that it crushes 10# in the blink of an eye rather than cranking a corona for an hour. i remember the days when we'd have 40-50# to mill on the corona and spend half the day working on that...
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
- grub
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i'm a big fan of the barleycrusher. cheap and reliable, excellent crush, great customer service.cannondale wrote:Any recommendations on the best choice/source for a motor/grain mill?
as for motorizing, your options are to use a drill (any cheap corded variable speed drill should work), or get fancy and put something together like i've got using a motor + sheaves. i like the "set and forget" nature of my setup, but some folks like drills.