Brewtarget 2.1.0 Manual
Table of Contents:
- A Walkthrough
- Setting Options
- Defining Your Equipment
- Making a New Recipe
- Adjusting Recipe Parameters
- Selecting the Style
- Adding Ingredients
- Making A Mash
- Brewday Mode
- Printing the Recipe
- Saving Your Work
- General Concepts
- Inventory
- Trees
- Adding Ingredients to Recipes
- Importing Recipes
- Exporting Recipes
- Backing Up and Restoring Databases
- Posting Your Recipe
- Tools
- OG Correction
- Pitch Rate
- Priming Calculator
- Refractometer
- Units
- Contrulling Units and Scale
- Caveats with Auto-conversion
- Units and Abbreviations
- New In Brewtarget v2.1
- New In Brewtarget v2
A Walkthrough
I figure it's probably easier to demonstrate the features of the program rather than try to explain every single concept. We will create a nice American Amber Ale, trying to touch on as many features as possible.
Setting Options
Brewtarget's options are in Tools->Options.
Note: if you choose Plato for gravity, then all the displayed FG numbers are not corrected. So, the displayed FG reflects the actual FG: not what you will see if you use your refractometer.
On the Formulas tab, set Color to "Morey's" and "IBU" to Tinseth. The screen should look like:
Defining Your Equipment
Never ever try to formulate a recipe without setting up an equipment profile. Having an equipment profile for your recipe is very important in Brewtarget. It contains a lot of information about your particular setup, and helps Brewtarget make better estimates.
There are three ways to create a new equipment profile. You can click
View->Equipments to open the equipment editor;
If you use the first two methods, you need to click the blue "+" at the bottom of the window to create a new profile. After you click the plus, or if you started from the equipment tree, you will need to provide a name for the profile. Once you have done that, press Ok.
Fill out as many of these fields as you can.
Section | Field | Description |
---|---|---|
Header | ||
Set as Default | Set this equipment profile as the default profile to be used when creating recipes. | |
Required Fields | ||
Name | Any name you choose to title your equipment setup | |
Pre-boil volume | Amount of wort in the kettle immediately prior to boil. | |
Calculate pre-boil volume | Automatically calculate the pre-boil volume based on boil time, losses, and water additions, instead of entering it by hand. | |
Batch size | How much wort you want in the primary fermenter | |
Boiling & Water | ||
Boil time | How long you usually boil. Note: As of version 2.0, brewtarget allows you to modify the boil time directly on the recipe. This works simply as a default. | |
Evaporation rate | Water loss during the boil, per hour. Typically, around 3L or 0.75 US gallons. | |
Kettle top-up water | Amount of water you usually add directly to the kettle before boiling. For extract recipes, this should be equal to the boil volume. | |
Final top-up water | Amount of water to add to the wort immediately before going into the primary. | |
Grain absorption | How many liters of water are permanently lost to each kilogram of grain during mashing. The default value is 1.0875 liters per kilogram. This can fluctuate due to the fine-ness of your grind, humidity, brand, and other factors. Pressing the "Default Absorption" button will reset the value to this default. | |
Boiling Point of Water | The temperature at which water boils. The default value is 100C (212F), but the actual value will vary with altitude. | |
Hop Utilization | Correction for hop utilization. Typically 100 percent in homebrew systems, somewhat more than 100 percent for larger systems. | |
Mash Tun | ||
Volume | The maximum volume your mash tun can hold. | |
Mass | Mass of your mash tun. | |
Specific Heat | Specific heat of the material of your mash tun in cal/(g*C). Typical values are:
|
|
Losses | ||
Kettle to fermenter | How much wort you leave in the kettle when you transfer the wort to primary. | |
Lauter deadspace | How much wort you lose in the lauter tun. |
When done, press the diskette
button at the bottom of the dialog to save the new profile. You should have
something like this.
Making a New Recipe
Click on either File->"New Recipe", click the blue plus in the toolbar at the top of the main window or right-click in the recipe tab of the tree and select "New Recipe". Name your recipe in the box that pops up, and click "OK".
Adjusting Recipe Parameters
If you created your equipment profile as shown above, and you made it the default profile, you won't need to do anything else.
Otherwise, choose the equipment profile you set up in the New Equipment section from the Equipment drop-down list. You can also drag it from the tree on the left and drop it on the recipe. After selecting or dropping the equipment, you will be asked if you want to set the batch and boil size of the recipe to that of the equipment. Click "Yes".
Selecting the Style
Brewtarget comes pre-loaded with all of the BJCP styles. You can check your recipe against the guidelines for the particular style you are brewing. To do this, select " American Amber Ale" from the Style drop down list.
You will notice that the bubbles in the right pane changed.
Adding Ingredients
Open the "Fermentable" tree in the left pane (denoted with a barley icon),
and drag'n'drop the
- Briess 2 Row Brewers Malt
- Briess Caramel Malt 80L
Back at the main window, you will see those two malts in your recipe. Click on
the Crystal 80's "Mashed" checkbox to tell it that we want to have
this in the mash (this malt can also be simply steeped). You should have this:
Units
Here's a cool feature about Brewtarget: you can enter amounts of stuff in pretty much any units you want. Double-click the 2-row's "amount" cell and enter "4.536 kg". You will see that it immediately gets converted into "10.000 lb" if you're using US units. For the Caramel 80, tell it "32 oz" and watch it get converted into "2.000 lb". You can change US/English/SI preferences in Tools->Options. Please see Supported Units in this document to see the correct abbreviation for each unit.
Controlling units
You can control this feature for each of the main tables and fields in the display. For example, say you use a refractometer to measure your OG, but you use a hydrometer to measure the SG and FG. In the main window, right click on the "OG" label and select "Plato"
This feature works on all of the fields in the main window and on brewnotes by right-clicking on the label for the field. It works on the fermentables, hops, miscellaneous, yeast and mash tables by right-clicking on the header for the column. It works for any field for which it makes sense. For example, you can specify the units for amount, infusion temp and target temp on the mash table but not for the time. This feature is not fully implemented in all of the tables, editors and tools. We are working on it.
Controlling scale
Additionally, you can control the scaling where it makes sense. For example, assume you always want your fermentables in the table to displayed in grams. Right click on the "Amount" column in the table. Assuming you are following the tutorial, select select SI. Then click on the "Scale" submenu and you can select "Default" "Milligrams" "Grams" or "Kilograms" Selecting the first option will give you the default brewtarget behavior. The other three choices will force brewtarget to automatically scale the weights appropriately.
Important: do not forget that you SHOULD enter the unit suffix (lb, kg, L, mL, etc.) for the amount boxes in brewtarget. If you do not, brewtarget will try to guess what you mean based on your defaults and what field you are editting. The guessing is pretty good, but you should not rely on it. In this case, brewtarget will assume that fermentables are entered in either lbs, even if the display is set to kg.
Now you should notice something different about the bubbles in the main window. The OG bubble now has a white line with "12.2" above it, within the dark green bubble. This means the OG is within the range defined by the American Amber style.
The FG, though, is way off to the right of the bubble and nowhere near the dark green bubble. This means the FG is too high for the style. The ABV is pegged at zero, far to the right of the "to style" range. We will fix this once we add a yeast and a mash schedule to the recipe.
The color bubble now has a white line within the "to style" range. Those upgrading may notice that the glass has been removed. We liked the bubbles better.
Finally, the IBU/GU meter shows the beer as 0 and cloying. You shouldn't take this bubble too seriously, but it does provide a general guide on how balanced your beer is.
Now, go to the Hops tab and add 1 oz Cascade at 1 hr, 1 oz Cascade at 15 min, and 1 oz Cascade at 5 min. The IBUs should
be about 33.4, and in the green.
Add WLP001 yeast to the recipe. Now everything should be in the green.
Making a Mash
Let's do a 2-step mash with a protein rest at 121 F and a conversion rest at 152 F.
Aside: I should mention something here. Until now, Brewtarget has been lying to you. Underneath the target batch size on the main window, it says your calculated batch size and the calculated boil size are not 0. These are estimates based on your equipment profile. Brewtarget is lying because it's convenient just to be able to start adding the ingredients and get an approximate answer. After setting the mash addition volumes, you will get a real answer.
Switch to the Mash tab in the main window. Click on "Edit Mash" and
give it a name. You can enter the initial grain temp, sparge temp and initial
tun temp here. Entering these as accurately as possible will give you the best
chance to nail your temperatures. To set tun mass and specific heat, you
should click "From Equipment".
You can save this mash profile by pressing "Save Mash" at the bottom of the mash tab. It will be saved under the name you gave it in the "Edit mash" dialog. You can recall a mash profile by selecting it in the appropriate drop down box. From here, there are two ways to create the mash.
Method 1: Mash wiz
Go to the mash tab and click the blue plus. Name it "Protein" and
click "OK".
Double click its "Target Temp" cell and change
to "121 F", and change the "Time" to "20 min".
This means we want to hit a target temperature of 121 F for 20 minutes.
Do the
same for a "Conversion" step at "152 F" for "1
hr".
The mash wiz is for quickly and easily getting the correct mash temperatures
and volumes for a single batch sparge mash. Click on the "Mash wiz"
button, and give it a mash thickness of 1.25 qt/lb.
When you select "OK", the mash wizard does 3 things for you:
calculated infusion volumes, infusion temps, and gave you a sparge step that
will make you hit your pre-boil volume.
Now Brewtarget is not lying anymore about the calculated boil volume and batch size. You can see any of the infusion temperatures under the "Infusion Temp" column.
You don't have to actually sparge with all of the sparge water, but can put a portion directly into the kettle depending on how you like to sparge. You can also split the sparge water into multiple sparge batches. Fly sparging should understand the "final batch sparge" to indicate the volume of sparge water they should collect.
Since your equipment and recipe might change, you should always do the mash wizard after recalling a saved mash profile.
Method 2: Mash designer
The mash designer is for more advanced users. It can be used to create any mash schedule
you desire with however many sparges, and at whatever infusion temp or volume you desire. To start it,
just click the "Mash Des" button. A dialog will ask you for the temperature of the
tun before the first infusion, so enter 70 F and continue.
We are now looking at the parameters for the first infusion. Enter "Protein" for the name, leave the type at "Infusion", enter "121 F" for "Target temp.", and "20 min" for the time. Now, you can either move the infusion/decoction amount slider OR the infusion temp slider. Moving one will cause the other to move so that the combination of amount and infusion temp causes you to hit 121 F. The upper and lower limits of these sliders are based on the maximum available space left in the tun (as given by the current equipment), and the boiling temperature of water. Start the amount slider at the far left. You will see that the tun fullness meter on the right shows an infusion ratio of 0.11 qt/lb which is far too low. How do I know it's too low? The total collected wort meter shows a negative value, meaning that the grain will absorb all of the infusion's water and could absorb more. So, slowly move the amount slider until the infusion ratio reaches about 1.25 qt/lb.
Name this step "Conversion" and set the target temp to 152 F and the
time to 1 hr. Slowly move the temp slider all the way to 212 F.
Name this step "Batch Sparge". Click the "Batch Sparge" checkbox, set the target temp to 165 F, and the time to 15 min. You will notice that the tun fullness has gone down, simulating that you have drained the tun of liquid; this is the purpose of the checkbox. Move the amount slider slowly to the right until the total collected wort reaches about 6.25 gal.
If you exceed the target collected wort volume, the
progress bar will still show 100 percent, so be careful and pay attention to
the text which shows the actual collected wort.
Finally, click "Finish" to return to the main window.
Brewday Mode
Now that your recipe is all planned, wouldn't it be good to have some instructions on your brewday? Click the "Brewday" tab at the top of the main window. Click "Generate Instructions". It has made all instructions for you and listed them on the left in order. You can remove, shift up/down, insert, change steps as you see fit to help you be organized on your brew day.
There are 3 timers to help you with time-critical steps if you click the clock button in the toolbar of the main window. They are in HH:MM:SS format, and the text box above each one is what you use to set it. Just enter "1:00:00" and press "set" to set the timer for 1 hour, for example. The "Sound" button allows you to select a sound that will be played when the timer reaches zero. Brewtarget has provided many default sounds to choose from, or you can select any other sound file on your computer.
Printing the Recipe
Print and print preview are available under the "File" menu. There are two printouts available. One is "Recipe" and the other is "Brewday". The recipe printout is all the info related to the recipe you have made. The brewday printout is formatted in organized specifically for following when you brew.
Saving Your Work
When you close brewtarget, you will be given an option to either save or discard your work.
General Concepts
Brewtarget v2.x uses an SQLite database of recipes, ingredients, etc. If brewtarget should crash unexpectedly, you will be prompted to either restore the changes made during the last session or rollback the database to discard the changes in the last session.
Inventory Tracking
I somehow feel that should in a larger font.Of all the requested features for brewtarget, inventory tracking has to be the most requested. From out of nowhere, mrostling made it all work. I'm impressed and you should be too.
How It Works
The mechanism is pretty straight forward. Open up the item you want to record your inventory, say "Briess 2 Row Brewers Malt". Towards the bottom of the left hand side, enter the amount you have in inventory. On any recipe you have used this malt, you can now see what you have in inventory.
Every time you use the "Brew It!" functionality, the amount in inventory is reduced by the amount the recipe uses.
Be somewhat careful. We do not provide warning (yet) if your recipe calls for 2 kg of crystal 80, but you only have 1 kg in inventory.
Trees
The application window is split into three major panes: the trees, the recipe and the ingredients. The tree pane is a set of tabs that displays your recipes, equipment profiles, fermentables, hops, miscellaneous items and hops. You can sort any of the trees on the displayed fields. Double clicking on any item in the tree will open up the appropriate editor for that item. For recipes, it will open the recipe in the main window.
There are 6 tabs:- Recipes - this tree shows all your recipes. You can drag'n'drop the recipe onto the main window and that recipe will be loaded. Each recipe will also show any associated brewnotes.
- Equipment - this shows all your defined kit. You can drag'n'drop a piece of equipment onto your recipe which will have the same effect as changing the equipment via the dropdown box.
- Fermentables, Hops, Misc and Yeast - these show all of your defined fermentables, hops, miscellaneous and yeasts, respectively. Dragging an item onto the main window will add that item to the recipe.
You can right-click almost anywhere on a tree and get a menu of options. The menu has been significantly simplified in v2.1. The new menu now allows you to only create a new item or a folder. The item you can create depends on the tree you clicked in. If you right-clicked in the miscellaneous tree, for example, you can create a miscellaneous item. Other than that, the menus are identical for each tree.
You can select multiple items, right-click and then perform an action on the entire selected list. The only exception is the "Export" function. Limitations in the BeerXML format makes it very difficult to export both recipes and anything else at the same time.
When dragging and dropping an item onto the main window, you must be specific with your target. To support folders in v2.1, we had to make brewtarget more selective in which drops are allowed on a given bit of the screen. You can drop recipes, styles and equipment profiles on the recipe pane; you can only drop fermentables, hops, miscellaneous and yeast on the ingredients pane.
There is one exception to that rule.
Folders
We are pleased to announce that brewtarget now supports subtrees and folders in the trees. You can nest them arbitrarily deep. You can move folders around and their content will move with them. There are a few rules.- We develop mostly on linux, so our folder separator is /. You can create an entire tree if you want, like /IPA/BYO/2012/Sept, in one go but you must use forward slashes (/) and not backslashes (\).
- We cheated in the implementation. Empty folders, or folders that contain only more empty folders, will not be shown after a restart of brewtarget. There are a lot of reasons for this, and we may find a way to fix it later. But for now, if you want a folder to be preserved, make sure you put at least one item in the bottom most folder.
- Deleting a folder deletes its contents too. You will only get prompted to delete the folder, not each item in the folder.
- Be careful when dropping a folder. There is a space between items that is not a valid drop target. Nothing will happen if you drop it there, which will likely be somewhat frustrating.
BrewNotes
If you right-click a recipe, you can select an action called "Brew It!". If you select this action, a new entry will be created underneath the recipe and a new tab will be opened in the main window. This new tab allows you to record important information about your beer during its creation (sg, volumes, temperatures, etc.). This allows the brewer to track performance over time and adjust their equipment and efficiencies to better predict what you brew.
If you want more fields available, open a feature request
The values are preloaded based on the recipe as written. As you move through your brewday, you can record the actual numbers. The calculated values in the middle of the screen will change based on those inputs. For example, if you expected an SG of 1.036 but only got 1.032 the projected OG, ABV and ABV will all change to reflect the lower SG.
There are four main sections on the brewnote tab.
Section | Field | Description |
---|---|---|
Preboil | ||
SG | Specific gravity of the collected wort | |
Volume | the volume of wort that made it into your boil kettle | |
Strike temp | The temperature of your strike water before dough in | |
Final temp | The temperature of your mash after dough in | |
Postboil | ||
OG | Specific gravity of the wort after the boil | |
Postboil Volume | the volume of wort in your boil kettle | |
Volume into Fermenter | the volume of wort in your primary fermenter | |
Pitch temp | the temperature of your wort when you pitched the yeast | |
Postferment | ||
FG | Specific gravity of the wort after fermentation | |
Volume | the volume of beer bottled or kegged | |
Date | the date the beer finished fermenting | |
Notes | ||
Notes | Any notes specific to the brew day |
Adding Ingredients to a Recipe
Method 1: Editors
If you are looking for a fermentable with a specific SRM or a yeast from a specific lab, this approach allows you to sort on any column you want.- Choose the appropriate tab in the main window (Fermentable, Hops,...).
- Click the "add" button in the tab.
- Select any column of the row of the ingredient you wish to add.
- Click "Add to Recipe".
Method 2: Drag'n'Drop
This is the lazy way of doing it, as long as you don't mind the default sort order.- Open the appropriate tree in the left pane.
- Click on the item you wish to add
- Drag it to the ingredients pane on the main window
- And drop
- The tabs will change if required. E.g., if you drop a hop onto the "Fermentables" tab, the focus will change to the "Hops" tab.
Importing Recipes
You can import other BeerXML recipes (such as, from Beersmith) by using File->Import Recipes. However, you need to be aware that Beersmith does not strictly adhere to XML standards or even BeerXML itself (!), so you may have some trouble importing recipes from time to time. Brewtarget tries to maintain strict compatability with both.
Exporting Recipes
This option will export selected recipes to BeerXML.
Backing Up and Restoring Databases
For many reasons, you may want to back up all your recipes and ingredients and everything. To do this, go to File->"Backup Database" and select an empty directory. Restoring the database is just as simple. However, be aware that when you restore a database, anything in your current one will be wiped out.
As of Brewtarget v2.0, restoring a database will cause brewtarget to automatically restart.
Posting Your Recipe
Brewtarget offers two different methods for posting your recipes.Method 1: Recipe to Clipboard
This tool is used to make a text version of the recipe so that you may post it online or whatever else you can do with a text version. To get the text version, Tools->"Recipe to Clipboard as Text", then click paste in a text editor or other paste-able window.
Method 2: Recipe to HTML
Another way you can share you recipes is to export them to HTML. Use File->"Recipe"->"Save to HTML". You can export either the recipe or the brewday instructions.
Tools
Brewtarget offers a lot of tools to aid the brewer in writing recipes and on the brew day itself.OG Correction
A common problem is that you under or over estimate your efficiency and get a different OG than you planned for. To correct this in the boil, choose Tools->"OG Correction Help". Please note that this tool makes the assumption that you are not going to add any water post boil. Just enter the SG, temp of sample, and calibration temp of the hydrometer OR the degrees Plato of the wort as you read it pre-boil. Then enter the pre-boil volume. Now, click "Calculate" and 3 fields will populate on the output half of the window. The first shows you the post-boil OG if you do nothing. The next shows you how much water to add (or boil off if negative) in order to achieve the right OG. The last shows how much wort you will end up with.
Pitch Rate Calculator
This tool is located in Tools->"Pitch Rate Calculator" and helps you to make a starter that has the correct amount of yeast for your beer. Put in the wort volume, OG and starter OG (in specific gravity) and select the pitch rate. The pitch rate should be 0.75-1.00 for most ales and 1.50-2.00 for lagers. The output is the number of yeast cells required (in billions), the number of wyeast activator packs or white labs vials needed without a starter, the amount of dry yeast required (without starter), and the size of the starter needed to reach the cell count at the given starter OG (usually never over 1.030).
Priming Calculator
Tools->"Priming Calculator". Put in the required input values, select a priming agent, and press calculate.
Refractometer
Tools->"Refractometer Tools". Here, you can find OG and current SG by using refractometer readings. You must always enter the current plato and either the original plato OR the OG. If you just want to find out what 11.2 Plato corresponds to, enter 11.2 in both the original plato and current plato fields.
Units
Brewtarget supports SI, Imperial, and US customary units. To switch between these modes, go to Tools->Options->Units, and check/uncheck the appropriate box. It also supports auto-conversion. For example, if you are in US mode, and you enter "0.50 gal" into a text field, it will appear as "2.000 qt". You may also enter units from the other unit system if you like. However, if you enter an unsupported unit, Brewtarget will assume the quantity you entered has the same units as the BeerXML entry for that field (which is usuall SI). For example, if you enter "20 asdf" into a volume field while in US mode, you will see "5.283 gal" because Brewtarget assumed you meant "20 L" and then converted to US units. In other words, always use a valid unit suffix.
Controlling unit and scale
A new feature to Brewtarget v2.0 is the ability to control what units are used in the display and how they scale. In any field where it makes sense (volumes, weights, temperatures and gravities), you can right-click the associated label and be presented with the unit and scale menu.
Volumes will present you with the options "default", "SI", "US Customary" and "British Imperial"; weights will present you with the options "default", "SI" and "US Customary"; temperatures will present the options "default", "Celsius" and "Fahrenheit"; gravities will show "default", "Plato" and "Specific Gravity".
Selecting one of those options will cause that field to be displayed in the selected unit. So you can, for example, display Boil SG and OG in Plato, but FG in specific gravity.
You can also select the scale for any volume or weight field. You can use this to, for example, cause your target batch size to be displayed in quarts instead of gallons.
You can do the same thing in any of the ingredient tabs by right clicking on the column header. This will allow you to display your hops in grams, but keep your fermentables displayed in pounds.
Caveats with Auto-conversion
With US and Imperial units, people have a tendency to sometimes put a trailing "s" or a period at the end (hrs, hrs., etc.). Brewtarget only supports singular no-period units to be consistent with the metric system. This is a common error among users since the habit is so ingrained. The units supported, and the exact unit abbreviation you should use are given below.
Supported Units
US Customary and British Imperial Units
The abbreviations are the same as for US Customary and British Imperial units, but they denote the appropriate quantity in each system.
Unit | Scale | Abbreviation |
---|---|---|
Mass/Weight (BeerXML pretends they are the same) | ||
Pounds | lb | |
ounces | oz | |
Volume | ||
Gallons | gal | |
Quarts | qt | |
Cups | cp | |
Tablespoon | tbsp | |
Teaspoon | tsp | |
Temperature | ||
Fahrenheit | F |
Metric Units
Unit | Scale | Abbreviation |
---|---|---|
Mass/Weight (BeerXML pretends they are the same) | ||
Kilograms | kg | |
Grams | g | |
Milligrams | mg | |
Volume | ||
Liters | L | |
Milliliters | mL | |
Temperature | ||
Celsius | C | |
Kelvin | K |
Shared Units
Unit | Scale | Abbreviation |
---|---|---|
Time | ||
Days | day | |
Hours | hr | |
Minutes | min | |
Seconds | s |
New in this release
Brewtarget 2.1 focuses on updates to the interface. Two of the most commonly requested features have been implemented in this release. Subfolders in the trees, and inventory.
Inventory tracking
Of all the features requested in brewtarget, this is the most popular. I wish rocketman or I could take credit for doing this, but it all goes to mrostling. From out of nowhere, mrostling submitted an almost perfect patch to implement this feature.
Bubbles
The main interface has received a significant face lift by removing the numbers on the right of the recipe pane. They have been replaced by sliders showing where in the spectrum your beer falls. This has also resulted in the glass going away, and the boil SG and Calories/12oz moving to the left of that pane.
Strike water toolbox
Maxime Lavigne added a new tool to caclulate strike water temperatures outside of the usual mash designer. You can access this from the Tools menu.
Folders
You can now create folders to store your recipes, or equipment or fermentables or .... Right click on any tree, select New->Folder and give it a name. You can then drag recipes (or hops, grains, etc.) into the folder.
Drop targets
Prior to v2.1, you could drop a recipe anywhere on the screen and it would load that recipe. You must now drag the recipe onto the recipe portion of the main screen.
Tool tips
You can now hover over any item in a tree (like a recipe, or a fermentable) and a tool tip will be shown giving the basic information about that item.
New in v2.0
Brewtarget v2.0 has been long in the making, mostly because we have done a massive reworking of the internals.SQLite DB
We have replaced the old XML files with a brand new SQLite database. We have spent a long time making this as transparent as possible. If we have done our jobs well, the only thing most users should notice is brewtarget seems to load faster and is a bit faster in other places.
We will be using this change to implement inventory, multi-level undo, automatic versioning of recipes, etc. We also hope to allow you to decide which database engine you want to use -- SQLite and mysql at least, postgresql likely.
Units and Scales
This has been a very requested feature that has taken us a long time to implement correctly. You can now override the default unit (e.g., US Customary) per field, and you can control the scale (so your hops are always displayed in grams, no matter how many kilos you are adding).
Tree Views
The trees continue to evolve. They are now split into their own separate tabs and can be sorted on the fields displayed. The next release will let you select which fields are displayed and hopefully allow you to define folders.
Default Equipment
You can select one piece of equipment as the default and any new recipe will have that automatically defined as the equipment. You can do this by opening the equipment profile and selecting the "Set as default" option in the upper left.
Hop Utilization
You can configure your hop utilization from the equipment screen. This may cause your recipes to show 0 IBU. If you are seeing this, set your hop utilization to 100 on your equipment.