Thursday, August 15, 2013

Sours BrewingTV

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xonwaRtCHuo&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Brewing 001 - Marble Red imitation (2.5gal)

Today an all-grain AmericanPA was created.

The grain-bill was off, lets hope it is a good mistake, but I put more Crystal 120L than the recipe suggested.

  • 5.02 lbs, 2-Row
  • 0.67 lbs, Vienna
  • 0.67 lbs, Crystal 80L
  • 0.67 lbs, Crystal 120L

We bought a crappy little mill from the local kitchen supply store, which broke about 3 lbs into the bill, so the remaining 3.5 lbs were crushed with a rolling pin...

It started with a 150F mash for 60 min. The cooler held the temp to the degree for the whole mash. The PVC lautering system was fabulous, and the flow control using the tube clamp was perfect. I simply poured the sparge water on-top of the plastic lid to protect the grain bed (even though it was quite thick).




When I got somewhere around 2.5 gal of wort I stopped the sparge, but the liquid was still quite sweet and colored. I would really like to have made a second batch of "house" brew with the remaining sugars in the grain, but I don't have the equipment to run parallel fermenters.

I forgot to measure the preboil gravity, stupid mistake...

The boil of course was a little tight in the 2.5 gal pot, it did of course end up boiling over.

Hop schedule was not exactly from the recipe either:

  • 70 min Columbus (0.5oz)
  • 10 min Citra (0.25oz), Simcoe (0.25oz), Cascade (0.375oz)
  • 0 min Cascade (0.75oz)
At 10 min I also threw in the wort chiller. When the boil was done I stirred it up a bit, then chilled it down. The chiller worked great as well, took maybe 10 min. Dumped it in to the fermenter, stirred like craze to oxiginate, and pitched the yeast. Used WYeast 1056 American Ale yeast.

Postboil gravity was very hard to read, I had to extrapolate through the foam cap, somewhere around 1.065 I think. I hope it's mostly fermentable :)

Temperature today is a little warm, 71F, now it's fermenting so next update in a few days when the transfer to the secondary and dry-hopping happens.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Wort cooling tres important

This is the wart chiller, taking a test run on hot water. The cooling was magnificent even with stainless steel; remember it's thin so the conductivity of the metal should play only a trivial role. 
Collecting yeast from bottles may be an interesting way to get commercial yeast strands...

http://byo.com/stories/item/1333-round-it-up-collecting-yeast-from-bottles

Monday, August 5, 2013

Using inverted sugar for trappist style

http://brewvana.wordpress.com/2010/06/10/the-secrets-of-making-belgian-trappist-ales/

Trappist style

http://beersmith.com/blog/2010/09/01/trappist-dubbel-and-tripel-beer-recipes/

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Getting Started - The Plan

Brewing is expensive, well actually it can be expensive. I'm going about this with the attitude that drinking beer is expensive (the drinkable stuff in Canada runs 15$ a six-pack), so hopefully making it saves me money in the long run. Unfortunately I can't drop a ton of money on brewing, and why would I? I build things for a living...

I have a large pot (2.7G), a cooler (or mash tun), some Pyrex... but not much else. I will be building my system from the bare essentials, using what I have to get by with, until I can get the items I really want (only the best unfortunately). The strategy is going to be brewing as soon as possible on as little $$ as possible. The first months are going to be the hardest though, because I think I've convinced myself I would rather keg than bottle, so buying bottles now would just be a huge waste of money (about 80$ for glass n cap(er/s)). Kegs require a large initial investment, in particular for the gas delivery system, fortunately the same gas system can be used for multiple kegs (someday).

Meanwhile I've sources some places in Ontario to purchase from:
The best prices on kegs and keg equipment (why don't they have brewing buckets?)
http://www.ontariobeerkegs.com/default.asp

This place has everything but keg stuff:
http://homebrewsupplies.ca/category/bottling/

And this place seems to have a bit of everything but not as much selection:
http://www.torontobrewing.ca/servlet/StoreFront

There are others, if I come across anything great I guess I'll post it then.

This month I will buy miscellaneous things to get started building the Lautering system. This will almost certainly come from McMasterCarr, and it will be mostly plumbing, piping, etc.

Marble Red

Marble Red would be a staple for me, and I think the first beer I'm going to try to emulate. It's hoppy yet very drinkable, not so sweet that you couldn't throw back a few.


I found this recipe posted by ditch at Home Brew Talk (I think he found it in a book, I don't have the sauce)

Marble Red Ale

Style: American IPA
OG: 1.065
FG: 1.016
ABV: 6.42%
Color: 18.4 SRM
IBU's: 57.59
Efficiency: 75%
Boil Size: 7.75 Gal
Batch Size: 6.00 Gal
Preboil OG: 1.055
Boil Time: 90 minutes

Fermentation Steps

Name Days Temp
Primary 5 days 68.0°F
Secondary 7 days 74.0°F

Grains and Adjuncts

Amount Percentage Name Time Gravity
12.05 lbs 75.00% Rahr 2-Row 60 min 1.035
1.61 lbs 10.00% Weyermann Vienna Malt 60 min 1.038
1.61 lbs 10.00% Caramel/Crystal Malt - 80L 60 min 1.034
0.80 lbs 5.00% Caramel/Crystal Malt - 120L 60 min 1.033

Hops

Amount IBUs Name Time AA%
1.00 oz 40.43 CTZ 75 min 14.00
0.50 oz 6.56 Citra 10 min 13.20
0.50 oz 6.46 Simcoe 10 min 13.00
0.75 oz 4.13 Cascade 10 min 5.50
1.50 oz 0.00 Cascade 0 min 5.50
2.50 oz Cascade 3 days 5.50 @ 65 then cold crash 2 days
0.50 oz 40.43 Citra 3 days 13.20 @ 65 then cold crash 2 days
0.50 oz Simcoe 3 days 13.00 @ 65 then cold crash 2 days

Yeasts

Amount Name Laboratory ID
3.0 pkg American Ale Wyeast Labs 1056

Mash Profile

Light Body Infusion in 60 minutes @ 150.0 deg F

Carbonation

To 2.5 Vol CO2

Breckenridge - 471 Small Batch


This is a beer I hope to emulate.
Why?
Because it's unique, hoppy, malty, sweet, balanced, and packs a real punch.


Their1 description
Hoppy? Brother, 471 IPA redefines hoppy.471 is a small batch, limited edition ale that was created by our Brewmaster to separate the weak from the strong. 471 is a double IPA, that combines Pale, Munich, Caramel-30, Carapils and Torrified Wheat malts, with Chinook, Centennial, Simcoe and Fuggles hops. It has a big sweet mouthfeel, followed by more hoppiness than you've ever had at one time. Enjoy.

Beer Style:Double IPA (India Pale Ale)
Flavor:Big sweet mouthfeel balanced by aggressive hoppiness
Yeast:British Ale Yeast
Malts:Pale, Munich, Caramel-30, Carapils, Torrified Wehat
Hops:Chinook, Centennial, Simcoe, Fuggles
Color:Copper
Bitterness Units:70
Alcohol By Volume:9.2%
Alcohol By Weight7.3%
Here's a recipe from wottaguy2 perhaps to start from:
Breckenridge 471 IPA Clone
14-C Imperial IPA

Size: 6.5 gal
Efficiency: 77.55%
Attenuation: 78.0%
Calories: 300.58 kcal per 12.0 fl oz

Original Gravity: 1.090 (1.075 - 1.090)
Terminal Gravity: 1.020 (1.012 - 1.020)
Color: 12.21 (8.0 - 15.0)
Alcohol: 9.29% (7.5% - 10.0%)
Bitterness: 69.7 (60.0 - 100.0)

Ingredients:
18.5 lb Pale Ale Malt (Briess)
0.50 lb Munich Malt
0.50 lb Caramel Malt 40L
0.50 lb Cara-Pils
1.0 lb White Table Sugar (Sucrose)
0.5 oz Chinook (13.0%) - added during boil, boiled 60.0 min
0.5 oz Centennial (10.0%) - added during boil, boiled 30.0 min
0.5 oz Centennial (10.0%) - added during boil, boiled 20.0 min
1.0 oz Simcoe (13.0%) - added during boil, boiled 20.0 min
1.0 oz Fuggle (4.8%) - added during boil, boiled 20.0 min
1.0 ea Whirlfloc Tablets (Irish moss) - added during boil, boiled 10.0 min
2.0 ea White Labs WLP007 Dry English Ale

Schedule:
Dough In - Liquor: 6.5 gal; Strike: 164

1Breckenridge 471 Small Batch
2The Hop Vine Discussion Forum