You were so close....... Look a few posts above yours. There is a calculator for bird watchers.hopkins21 wrote:Sorry if you guys have already covered this in this post but i got tired of reading after about page 27...lol
Good luck..
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You were so close....... Look a few posts above yours. There is a calculator for bird watchers.hopkins21 wrote:Sorry if you guys have already covered this in this post but i got tired of reading after about page 27...lol
Juice the lemons and remove the pulp. Juice only in the wash.magnetic_copper wrote:I have tried this recipe twice and both times were fantastic. It took me about 10 days to ferment from 1.06 to .98 at 22 C. On the calculator it says to use whole lemons, are they supposed to be cut in half? Also, as mentioned previously it does have an off tomato smell when distilled, but you cant taste it when drinking. Has anyone here ever tried using carbon to remove it to make it completely neutral or double distilled it and if so can you share the results.
Thanks.
1+WV Shine wrote:Have you tried watering the samples down to around 30% and then tasting/smelling? Sometimes that makes it easier to pick up on the flavors. If you ran super fast it may be smeared together pretty bad, which would make differentiation harder When ya do your spirit run you'll be able to pick up on the changes more easily.
Great tip! Thanks.frozenthunderbolt wrote:1+
if you water the samples down with hot water it will make the changes jar-to-jar even clearer again
You should be given a medal for this. Makes it so much easier to work it all outGreat tip! Thanks.
Birdwatchers ingredients calculator: http://shuggo.com/birdwatchers/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
All quiet on the Birdwatchers front then...hopkins21 wrote:Maybe you have already answered this, but why do you not put it in an a sealed ferment bucket with a water filled airlock after mixing instead of on the third day.....or can you. I was just curious, I noticed in the first of this thread it say to put in airlock on third day.
hopkins21 wrote:Maybe you have already answered this, but why do you not put it in an a sealed ferment bucket with a water filled airlock after mixing instead of on the third day.....or can you. I was just curious, I noticed in the first of this thread it say to put in airlock on third day.
When I started using BW, I was fastidiously clean. Disinfecting everything, using bottle wash, etc. I slowly became more relaxed about it all, and now I only rinse my equipment with tap water before starting. Once I've throw in the yeast, I try not to open the (loosely placed) lid too often, and that's it. I've never had any kind of infection.maheel wrote:i dont bother with airlocks and bubblers or a sealing lid....
Undies ,This is why I asked if it mattered or not. But I went ahead and just airlocked it from the get go...thanks for all the input guys.Place cover loosely, to let CO2 escape, keeping flying nasties out. There is so much CO2 coming off; there is no need to worry about oxygen coming in contact.
Place bottomless styrofoam box over fermenter. Dangle lit lightbulb through small hole in lid. Bulb must be strong enough to keep the mixture at a steady range of 30C-35C for entire fermentation. Size of bulb depends on room temperature. Stick your digital thermometer through side of box to track inside temperature.
{A good idea would be to set up with water a day before you begin wash to determine the size of light bulb to maintain water/wash in the 30-35C range.}
Check SG and temperature daily
Stir daily
On day three, syphon contents evenly into four 23 liter airlocked carboys
i have never EVER had a BW get infectedhilbilly wrote:Maheel, have you ever had a wash get infected?
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I see it as you wanting to take 25ml of ethanol per 20L of mash. So, you had 80l, so you want to remove 100ml of ethanol. So, depending on the ABV of what is coming out, you can determine how much to remove. And by ethanol, I mean ethanol as it is mixed with water as it comes out.Devonhomebrew wrote:Okay i know im not new to distilling but im still worried about foreshots ive distilled 80L of birdwatchers mash into 20L of low wines with literally no cuts and no foreshots cut either on my spirit run do i take 1L of fores of from the low wines because i usaully take 250ml per 20L of mash but i usaully only make 20L of mash at any one time then spirit run 5l of low wines with 3L of water so my boiler doesnt run dry whilst i distill?
With birdwatchers I usually get krausen at the beginning but settles out fairly fast. I usually keep my fermentation room at between 25-28C so your 30C should be fine as I haven't taken an actual temp of the fermentation in sometime.Cyclops wrote:i have just put a batch of this on and found that i didnt get any Krausen, it is definetly fermenting though as its fizzing like crazy, i am fermenting at 30C
Is this normal?