The history

Welcome to the Illuminati Publick House. I have been a homebrewer for approximately 5 years. I brewed my first all-grain batch in November of 2009. Sometime around January of 2010 I upgraded my brew system from the standard cooler with a manifold to a PID controlled RIMS brewing system. In July of 2010 I decided to build my ideal Mancave/Brew House so I could get all of my equipment out of the house and have a place for my friends and I to hang out.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

My System Upgrade

Brewing all-grain, although an enjoyable process, is often time consuming. The brew day is considerably longer than an extract brew day but setting up all of the necessary equipment is often as time consuming as the brew process.  That is why I upgraded to a fully integrated brew system.
When I was looking at systems I considered a HERMS system but it just seemed a lot more complex than a RIMS system. While I was checking out the pros and cons of each system, a friend of mine told me that he was developing a fully stainless, tri-clamp RIMS tube and would appreciate me trying it out and giving him some feedback.
That's where everything began. I decided that I wanted a two-tier system so that I could use gravity during sparging instead of using a pump. I also wanted a PID controller for the mash and a pump to recirculate the mash during the entire conversion rest. I decided to add 3 large 10" propane banjo burners, one for the HLT, one for the Mash Tun and one for the brew kettle.
A lot of brewers choose to let the RIMS system do all of the heating during the mash. However, I decided to add the burner under the mash tun to facilitate faster step mashes. I've learned that with some beer the ability to do a step mash adds a lot of complexity to the beer that is not as prominent in single infusion mashes.
Over the next few posts I'll go over my entire system, explaining how everything works and the details of each part of the system.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Homebrewing progression

Most of my early days of homebrewing were total disasters. I brewed a lot of cloying beer with strange off flavors and didn't really know what was causing any of it. Information wasn't as readily available online as it is now.
It was around October of 2007 when I finally decided to give brewing another shot. Northern Brewer had a few kits that piqued my interest. I think the first successful beer I ever brewed was a New Belgium Phat Tyre Ale extract kit. I never knew that homebrewed beer could be that good. However I still had the feeling that I had a long way to go.
Finally on September 12, 2009 I found a site that changed everything I knew about beer. The site was Homebrewchatter.com. Its members consisted of a group of passionate and knowledgeable homebrewers. It was more than just a web site or forum. It was a community. People were helpful and even though they were much more knowledgeable than I was. They had a passion for helping other beginning brewers.
One of the forum members was nice enough to give me the recipe for an IPA that he had converted to extract. It was delicious. I was amazed that an extract beer could be that complex.
I continued being active on the forum and learning everything I could about beer and homebrewing. That October I felt confident enough to attempt my first all-grain brew. It was a pumpkin porter and although it wasn't one of my favorite brews, I sent it in for a beer swap. Everyone who received it gave me pretty good reviews.
Although I didn't particularly like my first all-grain beer, I had still taken the first step to making my beer better and that single step planted a seed of desire in my heart for good beer.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Where it all started...aka my first homebrewing disaster

I first found out about the possibility of homebrewing beer sometime around 1999. I was attending college at Mississippi State University at the time and like most students I was broke. However, one evening I decided to buy a copy of Brew Your Own magazine at the local bookstore.
I read through that single magazine time and time again. I gazed in awe at the foreign looking pictures of equipment and read articles over and over that I didn't quite understand. One day I finally decided that brewing my own beer was something that I was determined to do.
One of the ads in the homebrewing magazine had caught my eye and I frequently visited the company's website. It wasn't quite as advanced as some of the more modern homebrew supply shops around today but there was a brewing kit that intrigued me. The kit was represented by a rotating gif image of a skull and had some kind of deathly connotation in the name. I read the description and decided that this was the beer for me. It promised to be extreme and high in alcohol and I'm sure it promised a lot more but that's really all I remember at the time I bought it.
Even though I had been reading everything I could find in those days about homebrewing, I still had only a limited knowledge of beer styles. Unfortunately this lack of knowledge had led me to selecting a beer kit that was an extract barleywine kit.
When the kit arrived at my house I looked over all of the strange looking ingredients: malt extract, hops, a bag of strange looking grains. Reading the directions, it sounded like a pretty simple process. The only thing required was to boil some water, add the strange looking yellow-tan powder, and throw in some green pellets (at pre-determined times of course). What intrigued me the most in the instructions was a small additional instruction. If you want to increase the alcohol of this beer add up to one pound of light brown sugar.
Well....the only problem with that was that I assumed if 1 pound made it better, then 5 pounds would make it a lot better. So, I added 5 pounds of brown sugar to a beer with an OG of somewhere around 1.100. If you're already a homebrewer, or if you know anything about sugar content and original gravity, then you can see where this is going. 
I was so proud of my first brew session that I was glowing with confidence and pride. i finished everything up by sprinkling the small packet of yeast on top of my freshly brewed wort and sealing the lid on the bucket. I affixed the airlock in the bucket, moved it to the corner of my bedroom and waited. When my wife came home I explained my accomplishment to her. She was polite enough to act impressed by my accomplishment of boiling water. However she also made it pretty clear that I better not leave some kind of mess in our house.
The first few days of fermentation were pretty uneventful and the airlock was showing some sign of activity, however, the most unusual thing was happening. The plastic lid on top of the bucket fermenter was beginning to bulge. I really didn't thing it was that big of a deal at the time but (as I've already mentioned) I didn't have a clue about what was going on underneath that bulging lid. 
The day of the incident was a pretty normal day and my wife and I both had to leave the house for most of the day. When we arrived back home that evening I walked into the house to check on my precious fermenting nectar and found that the lid for the fermenter was in the floor and the wall and ceiling were covered in a strange smelling brown sludge.