Saturday, November 24, 2012

Brew Day 11/24 - Honey Chocolate Oat Stout

Batch Size4.938 galBoil Size5.688 gal
Boil Time60.000 minEfficiency72%
OG1.052FG1.012
ABV5.2%Bitterness25.7 IBU (Tinseth)
Color44.2 srm (Morey)Calories (per 12 oz.)172

Fermentables

Total grain: 10.250 lb
NameTypeAmountMashedLateYieldColor
Black (Patent) MaltGrain8.000 ozYesNo55%500.0 srm
Chocolate Malt (US)Grain16.000 ozYesNo60%350.0 srm
Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40LGrain8.000 ozYesNo74%40.0 srm
Oats, FlakedGrain8.000 ozYesNo80%1.0 srm
HoneyExtract12.000 ozNoNo75%1.0 srm
Briess - Munich Malt 10LGrain7.000 lbYesNo76%10.0 srm

Hops

NameAlphaAmountUseTimeFormIBU
Goldings, East Kent5%1.000 ozBoil60.000 minPellet17.7
Saaz (Czech Republic)4.5%0.500 ozBoil60.000 minPellet8.0

Misc

NameTypeUseAmountTime
pH 5.2 StabilizerWater AgentMash2.995 tsp0.000 s
Bakers's ChocolateFlavorBoil8.000 oz0.000 s

Yeast

NameTypeFormAmountStage
WLP039 - Nottingham Ale YeastAleLiquid2.367 tbspPrimary

Mash

NameTypeAmountTempTarget TempTime
ConversionInfusion2.589 gal164.148 F152.000 F60.000 min
Batch SpargeInfusion4.334 gal175.452 F165.200 F15.000 min

Instructions

  1. Add 7.000 lb Pale Malt (2 row) UK, 8.000 oz Black (Patent) Malt, 1.000 lb Chocolate Malt (US), 8.000 oz Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L, to the mash tun.
  2. Bring 2.589 gal water to 164.148 F, 4.334 gal water to 175.452 F, for upcoming infusions.
  3. Add 2.589 gal water at 164.148 F to mash to bring it to 152.000 F. Hold for 60.000 min.
  4. Add 4.334 gal water at 175.452 F to mash to bring it to 165.200 F. Hold for 15.000 min.
  5. Bring the wort to a boil and hold for 60.000 min.
  6. Put 1.000 oz Goldings, East Kent into boil for 60.000 min.
  7. Stop boiling the wort.
  8. You should have 5.003 gal wort post-boil. You anticipate losing 0.000 tsp to trub and chiller loss. The final volume in the primary is 5.003 gal.
  9. Cool wort and pitch WLP039 - Nottingham Ale Yeast Ale yeast, to the primary.
  10. Let ferment until FG is 1.010.
  11. Transfer beer to secondary.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Brew Day:1, Pumpking! Ale clone??

so i had my first brew day yesterday, and it didn't go quite as smoothly as i would have hoped.
Thermometer issues, and a  massive stuck  sparge.. thus, a super cloudy wort.
but it was fun!
8 hours from start to the finish of clean up..
i'll be making a manifold for the mash tun, and hopefully that will help!
and i am looking forward to my next brew day where i am planning on a chocolate stout!





Friday, September 14, 2012

Mike's Beer Review: Samuel Adams Octoberfest


ok.. i should start with this.. this is actually the first beer that i actually liked about 5years ago, when i started drinking beer..

with that said, it was also the ONLY beer that i drank for a while.. Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall..

until, about 6months ago.. since then i've learned to expand my beer pallet
Now, to the reveiw..
Sam Adams says: "  Samuel Adams® Octoberfest has a rich, deep reddish amber hue which itself is reflective of the season. Samuel Adams Octoberfest masterfully blends together five roasts of malt to create a delicious harmony of sweet flavors including caramel and toffee. The malt is complimented by the elegant bitterness imparted by the Bavarian Noble hops."

i do get the sweet flavors, a nice maltiness.. not overly bitter , which is a nice change from the IPA's we've been having all summer..
there is a live roundness of the flavors.. somewhat "earthy" ..
they were right when they said:"Samuel Adams Octoberfest provides a wonderful transition from the lighter beers of summer to the heartier brews of winter."

while i would drink this again, i doubt i would actually buy it again.. so if ya'll invite me over, and you have some to offer, i will gladly accept!

Overall i'd say a 75/100

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Sam's Beer Review: Sierra Navada 2012 Tumbler

Name: Sierra Navada 2012 Tumbler 
Type: Autumn brown ale. 
Abv 5.5%
Review: The ale is a little carbonated. It almost reminds me of a soda. Bland with a hint of chocolate and leaves from the ground.. It goes along the label saying "roasted malt straight from the kiln." 

Rating: 72/100 for original flavor and crisp taste.

.. i'll be doing some reviews myself too!

My equipment thus far!

so.. i found this cabinet off of freecycle, so i got it! clean'd it up.. and here it is!
here's a picture of the inside

it has a lot of tube and stuff hanging in it, i normally keep the glass carboys in there, i'll finish cleaning the "wine" fermenting bucket and get it in there too, this is my "beer' fermenting bucket and some random pitchers and stuff.. 


This is my turkey fryer, with my brew-pot it's 7.5gal .. also you can see my bottle tree to drain my bottles .. and it's sitting on top of my (still unfinished) Mash tun/cooler


these are the shelves that are on the inside, they hold randomness that i have, corker, capper, bottle brushes, bottling wands, airlocks, thermometers, hydrometers.. 









and the second one mostly chemicals that has to do with brewing.. i still need to add the spigots to my brew buckets.. oxyclean, PBW, B-brite, the rubbermade tube has random wine chemicals in it, campden, yeast nutrient,  petic enzyme, some 1step, Meta K, and Meta Na, etc..









that just about does it.. ohh .. wait.. bottles.. i have bottles...LOTS of bottles..beer bottles in the milk crates, wine bottles in the others, and a few growlers and such.. 









And a "freezer" i use the term loosely.. 
the "freezer" , can go as high as 45* as low as 20*.. Right now it just has 2 bottles of Kombucha in it.. and i'm keeping an eye of the temputure inside of it..
eventually i'll need to "make' a "lid" for it.. when i get to kegging my homebrew!

Pumpkin Pie Wine: In Secondary

so today i stopped and looked at the fermenting bucket, and noticed the airlock slowed down, so i transferred it  to the glass carboy to settle out for a while.. it's a dark amber color right now.. but i do believe a lot of sediment got mixed up.. i have yet to master the art siphoning ..
i'll be tasting it again in a month or so..
if it just mellow's out it's nicely spiced, and pumpkin'y!
but it still has about 5% sugars left in it right now, should be down to 4-3% so time will tell!


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Pumpkin Ale (4 lot) tastings

So, on Saturday my Father-in-law surprised us by having us over, and we tasted 4 different pumpkin ales..
Shock Top
Smutty Nose
Blue Moon
one more, i can't remember <<-- Gary, can you help?

the Shock top, and the one i can't remember the name of, we're ok.. nothing great about them, couldn't really taste the pumpkin in them... but still drinkable, but really just a few brown ales..

the Smutty Nose pumpkin ale had so much hoppiness in it, it tasted more like a IPA than a pumpkin ale, again not bad, just couldn't get the pumpkin flavor in it..

and finally the Blue Moon, had a lite pumpkin flavor to it.. but more than any of the others.. if i were judging this solely on the pumpkin flavor this would win hands down..  i was shock'd that blue moon "won" this taste test..

On a side note, now i know that i'll probably want to double the ammount of pumpkin i add to my homebrew'd pumpkin ale on the 22nd of September.. i still need to research a little bit more, but i have the time to do it

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Kombucha #1 ...

Apparently i did not add enough sugar to the first batch, so it is fairly weak, but it's ok.. i can still taste the tea, the slightly sour/vinegar flavor is an acquired  taste, but good..
i got about 3 liters of it out of the batch,
i did add about 3T sugar to each bottle and put them in the fridge ..

next batch  is

5x tea bags
2x herbal tea (cherry berry(no "tea"))
1c sugar
1c kombutcha from first batch
and almost a gal of water

i'll let ya'll know about it next week!

Sept. 22 Brew day, and beer review : An open invite!

so this is an open invitation for anyone that wants to come and help with my first 5gal batch of homebrew, on September 22nd, around noon -6 is the goal, we'll have some tastes of some commercial brews during the down times .. maybe we'll tape it and throw it up on youtube?

Bring some brew's to share, and a chair! i'll probably have the grill crank'd

any how, you have been invited! (warned!)

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

ConAgra SC-142 Keezer project

so i've acquired a refrigerator / freezer from craigslist, and i got it for next to nothing..
i know that right now i'll just use it as a "beer fridge" .. but eventually will want to put a few kegs in it.. (it can hold 3 Corny kegs..)

to problem is i don't know how to make a new lid for it, and if i wanted to make it hold 3 kegs, it would need to have a collar of 14-16" on it to make the inside of it taller,
 i'm not a great builder or any of the handyman type of stuff..
it was used as a "Reddi Whip" cooler in a store.. and i can set it in the right temp range, but with the reach in lid i'm just stumped..
HELP!

the dimensions are

SC142
Capacity: 5.0 cu. ft.
Exterior: 28.9” W x 21.3” D x 33.8” H
Interior: 23.9” W x 16.0” D x 18.0” H




Ale to the Chief: White House Beer Recipe | The White House

Ale to the Chief: White House Beer Recipe | The White House:

YES

'via Blog this'

Saturday, September 1, 2012

"Hard Tea"

so  last night we went to an event at our friends house.. and they had the last bottle of my hard tea.. it was yummy.. so i'd figure i'd tell ya'll how i made it.. (i didn't ferment it, just "made" it)

one bottle of grain alcohol
tea leaves or bags
(flavorings)  i used fresh mint

add all to glass jar.
let sit for 2 days
mix with equal parts simple syrup

serve over ice while sitting on the front porch!

Friday, August 31, 2012

First Brew Day (Pumpkin Ale)

So my plan is to have my first brew day (all grain) (if i'm going to do it might as well start with all grain!)

the goal is to do it on the 22nd of September!
it should be a 6hr brew day with the mash and all we'll see..
i'll be looking up and possibly tweaking a recipe here shortly,
and i need to get some odds and ends..

if anyone wants anymore info let me know..!!


3 options here...


Recipe Type: All Grain
Yeast: WY1450PC Denny's Favorite 50
Yeast Starter: yes
Batch Size (Gallons): 5.5
Original Gravity: 1.054
Final Gravity: 1.012
IBU: 22 IBU
Boiling Time (Minutes): 60
Color: 12 SRM
Primary Fermentation (# of Days & Temp): 30
Tasting Notes: Subtle spice aroma expands to blend with pumpkin and malt notes on palate. Delicious!

Amount Item Type % or IBU 

8.00 lb Golden Promise (2 Row) UK (3.0 SRM) Grain 50.38 % 
3.625 lb Pumpkin* (2 x 29 oz. cans of Libby pure pumpkin) (3.0 SRM) Grain 22.86 % 
1.00 lb British Caramalt (34.0 SRM) Grain 6.30 % 
1.00 lb Toasted Malt** (27.0 SRM) Grain 6.30 % 
1.00 lb Wheat, Torrified (1.7 SRM) Grain 6.30 % 

1.00 lb Rice Hulls (0.0 SRM) Adjunct 6.30 % 

0.25 lb Molasses (80.0 SRM) Sugar 1.57 % 

0.50 oz Magnum [13.40 %] (60 min) Hops 21.9 IBU

1 t. cinnamon (5 min)
1/2 t. allspice (5 min)
1/2 t. ground ginger (5 min)
1/4 t. nutmeg (5 min)
1/4 t. clove (5 min)

*Pumpkin baked uncovered for 1 hour at 350 degrees to caramelize some of the sugars and gelatinize starches
**Maris otter malt toasted for 30 minutes in a 350 degree oven

Mash at 152 degrees for 60 minutes. Pumpkin should be included in mash. Be sure to use rice hulls as the pumpkin will make for a slightly sticky sparge.

Boil for 60 minutes. I used magnum to bitter but you can use any clean bittering variety being sure to adjust amount to get 22 IBU. Add molasses with 10 minutes left in the boil. Add all spices with 5 minutes left in the boil.

I used Denny's favorite 50 yeast but us-05 or it's liquid equivalents could probably be substituted with no ill-effect since Denny's yeast is a seasonal strain and could be hard to find. You may want to mash at 154 if you use us-05 since it should be slightly more attenuative and Denny's seems to give a bit more mouthfeel that mashing higher if you use us-05 should emulate. Having said that, if you can source some Denny's, use it!


_____________________


Grains

9.5 lbs. American 2-row
2 lbs. Munich Malt
.5 lbs. Crystal 80L
.5 lbs. CaraPils/Dextrine Malt

Hops/Fruit/Spices and Schedule

3.63 lbs. Canned Pumpkin (2 big cans of 100% pure pumpkin) boiled 90 min.
.75 oz. Northern Brewer (Pellets, 9.0 %AA) boiled 60 min.
1 oz. East Kent Goldings (Pellets, 5.50 %AA) boiled 30 min.
2.5 Tsp Cinnamon, boiled for 10 min.
1.5 Tsp Nutmeg, boiled for 10 min.
1.5 Tsp Allspice, boiled for 10 min.

Yeast

Safale US-56 California Ale Yeast or Wyeast 1056 American Ale

Mash Schedule

** Note the 90 minute boil. Make sure you have enough pre boil wort during calculations.
Strike grains at 165 degrees.
Mash grains at 153 degrees for 60 minutes.
Sparge with 170 degree water.

Boil Instructions

Bring to boil and add hops per schedule.
At end of 90 minute boil cool wort quickly, when it reaches 80 degrees pitch yeast.

Measurements (Spice/Herb/Vegetable Ale)

Since the pumpkin ale falls into the Spiced Beer category it has no style guidelines for OG,FG,SRM or IBU.

Ferment Instructions

Primary ferment between 63 – 70 degrees for 1 week, then rack to secondary for 2-3 weeks.  The longer racking adds better overall mouthfeel.

Bottling Instructions

Prime with 3/4 cup corn sugar and bottle. Condition in bottle for at least two weeks.

Kegging Instructions

Fill keg, purge oxygen and set to force carbonate at 12 psi at 40 degrees for one week. Drop CO2 regulator to 4 psi before serving.

___________________

Ingredients: Fermentables
  • 9 pounds American 2-row malt (90% of the grains)
  • 0.5 pounds 40°L Crystal malt (5%)
  • 0.5 pounds wheat malt (5%)
  • 6-10 pounds roasted pumpkin
  • 6 ounces molasses (about ½ cup) (optional)
Hops and Spices
  • 1 ounce Mt. Hood (4.6% alpha acid) for 60 minutes (bittering)
  • 0.5 ounces Mt. Hood for 15 minutes (aroma)
  • 1 teaspoon Irish Moss for 15 minutes
  • Pumpkin pie spices for 5 minutes/steeping
Yeast
  • Wyeast 1272 American Ale II
Process
  • Single infusion mash with a target of 152°F for 1 hour or until conversion
    • Mashing grains and pumpkin together
  • Sparge and boil for 60 minutes, with 1 ounce of Mt. Hood hops the full duration for bittering
  • After 45 minutes, add the remaining 0.5 ounces of hops for aroma, and the Irish Moss
  • Add the spices when there are 5 minutes (or less) left
  • Chill, transfer to your primary fermenter, aerate thoroughly and pitch yeast
Notes
Roasting the pumpkin. I used a baking pumpkin and a pie pumpkin that yielded about seven total pounds of pumpkin meat for the mash. To roast, I split the pumpkins in half, discarding the stems, and removed the seeds and strings (I kept the seeds and roasted them separately to snack on). Placing them face down on foil-lined baking sheet (sprayed with non-stick spray for good measure), they were roasted in a 325°F oven for about an hour and a half, or until nice and soft; they came out with nice caramelization on the edges as well. You can easily scoop the meat out of the shell and mash it up.
In my extract recipe, I spoke against using canned pumpkin for the mess you’d end up with; however, the treatment above leaves the pumpkin in a similar state and when doing a proper all-grain mash, you’ll have less messy results than you would for an extract-based recipe. This is because the alternative techniques you may employ to get the pumpkin in the beer for an extract recipe, I believe (and experienced), don’t leave you many options for filtering. In other words, for an all-grain approach, you could get away with canned pumpkin just fine.
Mashing. I’m using the batch sparge technique outlined in How to Brew, so my grain amounts are more that what I listed above due to the lower extract potential batch sparging yields: the adjusted numbers call for a total of 15 pounds of grain rather than the base recipe’s ten. This means I used 13.5 pounds of 2-row, 0.75 pounds of Crystal malt, and 0.75 pounds of wheat.
I heated the pumpkin up with the strike water so it wouldn’t affect the mash temperature (since you already need to account for the temperature of the grain when you mash in)—I found this to work really well and though my target mash temperature was 152°, I hit just above at 153°. This didn’t seem to effect the overall efficiency too much though—when I racked it to the secondary this weekend the gravity was 1.008.
With both the pumpkin and the half pound of malted wheat in the mash, I did encounter a bit of a stuck sparge—not enough to set me back significantly, but enough so that I think I would use a pound of rice hulls in the mash next time to help the filtering.
Miscellaneous notes. I only had three ounces of molasses instead of six on my brew day, so that’s what I went with. Molasses is of course completely optional; I rather like the subtle character it lends to the beer but you could omit it entirely or substitute with a variety of other sugars—some of the natural brown sugars like Demerara or Turbinado would work very well.
For my spice mixture I used 1½ teaspoons of cinnamon, ¼ teaspoon of ground ginger, and 1/8each teaspoons of nutmeg, cloves, and mace. (Allspice would work as well, as an addition or possibly substitute for the mace.) You could add vanilla also—my extract recipe calls for an optional half teaspoon but I didn’t use it this time.
If the spices are too subdued to your liking—especially after a vigorous primary fermentation that can effectively “scrub” them away—you might consider adding them to the secondary (and Ido recommend a secondary fermentation/rest). You could use the (powdered) mix similar to what I listed above, or you might even considering using some whole spices—cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, that sort of thing. Simply add these directly to the secondary.
Bottle with ¾ of a cup of corn sugar when ready. And enjoy!




Thursday, August 30, 2012

Kombucha

So i found a scoby, and i just made my first batch of Kombucha today also..
i used 3x reg tea bags,
3x Black tea with mint
1/4 C Sugar
3/4 gal water
i'll check on it in a few days to see how i like it!
and i'll tell ya'll about it!

Pumpkin Pie Wine!

so my wife and i have a quaint little garden, that over produced pumpkins.. so i'm going to try to make some pumpkin pie wine!

Recipe Adapted from Jackkeller.net

10-12# pumpkin
4# brown sugar
5oz Pumpkin pie spice (i'll use whole spices.. no nutmeg because of my mother-in-law)
3t yeast nutrient
1oz (2T) Acid blend
5x Campten Tablets
Enough water to bring it to 6.5 gal
and i'll be using
Lalvin ICV-D47

My goal OG will be 18%
the yeast threshold is 14%
so that should leave about 4% residual sugars

should be ready by Halloween 2013

2 Cases of Watermelon Strawberry Wine bottled and waiting

so i know i'm a bit late for this batch, but i wanted to write a blog about my fermentation experience...
this as my first batch was a learning experience.. i'm hoping it will turn out..

it had 4x large watermelon
3# strawberries
6# sugar
and   i used Lalvin 71B-1122 (thanks Gary)

it should have about 15% ABV
it'll be aging for 1 year before we try it.. i'll post an update when we get to that!