Sunday, February 17, 2013

Party-gyle time!

So on this wonderful Sunday afternoon, we will be rejoicing at the holiest church of homebrewing and praise thee, the holy partigyle barleywine and porter.

We will of course be sticking to the purity commandments.

First of all let me say that it is cold as balls outside - even for here in Buffalo. It is currently 10 degrees out with some wind and a bit of snow. We will still be attempting this holy partigyle - but we will probably do the big beer inside and the final boil on the lighter porter outdoors.

With that being said, here is the proposed recipes:

Carl's Millenium Barleywine

2.5 gallon batch in partigyle fashion

14lb 2-row
1 lb crystal 120L
.75 lb wheat
.5 oz millenium @ 60
.5 oz Cascade @10
.5 oz  Pacific Jade @0
Scottish Ale yeast
Champagne yeast if needed
OG: 1.090
FG: 1.020
ABV: 9.19%


Don's Breakfast porter

5-6 gallon batch

Same as above but add:

.5lb rolled oats
.5lb UK coffee malt
.5lb chocolate malt
Breiss porter LME - as needed to bring up the gravity (my first partigyle - so I don't know what I'm doing)
.75 oz Northern Brewer @ 60
.5 oz Cluster @ 30
.5 oz Willamette @ 20
Scottish Ale yeast
OG: 1.072
FG: 1.018
ABV: 7.09%


My good friends are coming by to assist me in the brewing and so they get a delicious beer named after them. They are both aspiring to brew and I hope that they enjoy this afternoon of homebrewing.

Beer and puppy pictures to follow. Go Sabres.


Here's the barleywine after 12 hours - crazy yeast festival:



Sweet porter is done!


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Christy's Witbier

Ok - so I may or may not be getting a puppy tomorrow. This of course changes my plans of brewing at 6:30am - now I must drink some coffee porters and brew through the night. Here we go:

Small 4 gallon batch:

3 lb Wheat
3 lb 2 row
.25 lb Carapils
.13lb rolled oats
.5 lb honey
.75 oz Tettnanger at 60 minutes
orange peel & corriander @ 5 minutes
Belgian Wheat yeast 3942


And there it is. Should be a nice, drinkable wheat beer.

According to my beer software I'm looking at around 5.1 SRM - so it will be the lightest beer I've made yet. Also it's IBU's are clocking in at a modest 17.5 - also a low for me. I have read that late additions to wheat beers are pretty much useless as the yeast flavor takes over. I'm not going to dry hop this thing here.

The honey addition was something I added to my last hefeweizen. I liked the boost in gravity - and I guess technically that makes it a "braggot" (beer and mead mix). Oh well - it will taste good either way.

I added a small amount of oatmeal to enrich the mouthfeel.

And finally my last straying from the Bavarian purity act, the peel and spices - well they just add a nice touch. Additions of spices, called "gruit" in Europe, were traditionally added to beers instead of hops. Eventually some dick ruler started taxing these spices and boom: people started using the flowers of a rapidly growing vine called "hops".

Another factor that caused gruit to be no longer utilized is the presence of psychoactive and poisonous herbs that were frequently added into the gruit. When Protestant Puritans saw the often aphrodisiac effects of the gruit in the beer, some guy was probably like: "hey, we should add hops to beer so we don't trip balls like those hippie Calthoics". Hops being a sedative preserved their inhibitions slightly more and they didn't trip balls.

Hops also acted as a preservative and they taste awesome.



Not bad fermentation activity for only 6 hours in and no yeast starter. Also a nice light color.

After some further research I have decided that (according to BJCP standards) this beer will be a Belgian Wit. The Belgians were the Dogfish Head of Europe.While the Germans were only brewing with 4 ingredients (only 3 that they knew of) - the Belgians were adding sugar, fruit, spices, sour beer - anything that wouldn't make 'em go blind. The wit beer at one time was a sour beer and typically has fruity, citrus, and bubblegum flavors. It's typical grain bill is around 50/50 barley to wheat and it is hopped with the noble variety (crystal was bred as the "American Hallertauer" - so that is why I chose it). Although a very popular beer at one time in Europe - it became extinct after lagers gained popularity in Europe during the 19th century. Hoegaarden Brewing eventually started brewing Witbier again in the 1960's but only in the past few decades has the style gained popularity here in the states.

Is beer in my blood?

So my brother was contacted by our geographically estranged cousins from the west coast and apparently my cousin (who was born two days after me) is a brewmaster in Colorado:

http://www.facebook.com/VerbotenBrewing

A pretty cool setup. As a small scale homebrewer - it is cool to see someone open up a shop like this - maybe someday I will open up the East coast version.

Ok - just wanted to share that. Check out his facebook page for more information. Back to porter research for me (drinking 5 porters tonight and taking notes.

Tomorrow: brewing a Belgian Wheat.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Tellskapelle Cider

At the request of non-beer drinkers, I am making a delicious hard cider for our recreational consumption.

Pretty easy recipe:

4 gallons 100% apple juice, preservative free
1/2 lb brown sugar
cinnamon
ginger
Scottish ale yeast
Wyeast cider yeast nutrient


Many people either heat up their juice to 180 degrees to kill off wild yeasts - or allow these wild yeasts to be the primary fermentation source - and not heat nor add any yeast at all. I chose to not heat up the juice - but I added some strong ale yeast with nutrient so that it would (hopefully) be the main source of fermentation.

I'm brewing up a 4 gallon batch and I must say that it was pretty easy to do. Just put juice in a fermenter, add adjuncts (if desired), and add yeast (if desired). Place fermenter someplace and wait 2 weeks or so. Then secondary ferment for another 4 weeks. Then carbonate for 3 weeks. Then drink. Done.