grain mills
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- Master of Distillation
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grain mills
What do you grain mashers use to crack your grain. I've been using a combination of a blender and kitchen aid sausage grinder to do the job, but I'm not satisfied... sort of like using a screwdriver for a chisel thing....close, but not quite right. Anyone ever tried these brewers grain mills?
http://www.stpats.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
look under the items for brewers, automatic mill.
for the record, no affiliation with the seller, I know I mention them a lot, but so far I'm a satisfied customer, aware of others horror stories tho...
It seems like this is a common design for brewers. Anyone used one?
http://www.stpats.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
look under the items for brewers, automatic mill.
for the record, no affiliation with the seller, I know I mention them a lot, but so far I'm a satisfied customer, aware of others horror stories tho...
It seems like this is a common design for brewers. Anyone used one?
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- Trainee
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I use an old coffee bean grinder (electric) I can usually grind 15 lbs of grain or so while my mash water is heating up. It helps to throw the grain in the oven for a few minutes, it makes it easier to grind. Corn I buy already rolled, but barley and malt I grind myself.
Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will sit in a boat all day and drink beer.
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Hobart
I bought an attachment for my wife's Hobart mixer which works pretty well, but my old hand-crank unit from http://www.morebeer.com still does most of my leg work. haven't tried their latest version which can be found here: http://www.morebeer.com/product.html?product_id=18599
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- Novice
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I use the "Barley Crusher" and couldn't be more pleased! I have had it for a couple of years now and still have no complaints. I chose it over others for 3 reasons. 1) Nice sized hopper standard 2)adjustable roller gap also standard 3) an unbeatable price for all of the standard features. Rock solid crusher for a good price. Can you tell i'm a happy customer?
If any of you guys do some type of mash with a decent amount of barley in it, then it really is a worthy investment. I bought one cause the guy who was crushing my grain at the home brew shop did such a poor job of it. Once I got mine and figured out how tight to go with the gap without getting a stuck sparge I watched my effiency go WAY up. FYI effiency just means how much fermentables you are getting out of your grain.
If any of you guys do some type of mash with a decent amount of barley in it, then it really is a worthy investment. I bought one cause the guy who was crushing my grain at the home brew shop did such a poor job of it. Once I got mine and figured out how tight to go with the gap without getting a stuck sparge I watched my effiency go WAY up. FYI effiency just means how much fermentables you are getting out of your grain.
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- Master of Distillation
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Thanks
I'm looking for a link for that name... You have one?
For those interested I found this:
http://www.aaoobfoods.com/graingrinders.htm#top" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
I'm looking for a link for that name... You have one?
For those interested I found this:
http://www.aaoobfoods.com/graingrinders.htm#top" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3086
- Joined: Fri Feb 03, 2006 11:40 am
- Location: Texas
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- Novice
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- Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 4:22 pm
- Location: LA ----Lower Alabama
Dawg - I have never cracked corn with it so I really can't say how it would do. I have however used rye, wheat & 2-row barley - worked on all of them like a charm. The wheat I used last time seemed to bit a bit smaller so I just tightened up the gap a bit and away I went. I will say the harder the grain i.e. wheat (this also depends on how big you have the gap set) is a little tougher to crank than plain ol' 2 row. Not that it made a difference to my mill mind you, only my arm. I would imagine that it would work with corn just as well though cause it's really built sturdy. Worst case scenario you would have to run the corn through at a wider gap setting initally so it would be easier to crank and then just tighten up the gap and run it a second time to get it down to the crush size you want.
That or you could just hook up a drill motor to the mill and not have worry about how tough to crack the grain is.
That or you could just hook up a drill motor to the mill and not have worry about how tough to crack the grain is.
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- Master of Distillation
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