Yet to be named English Barleywine

Posted by – 2011-01-20

  • Target OG: 1.091
  • Target FG:1.023
  • Target ABV: 10%
  • Target IBU: 98
  • Brewed: 01-10-09

 

  • 10 lb Maris Otter
  • 1 lb Crystal 20L
  • ½ lb Caramunich
  • 7 lb Light dry extract
  • Mashed at 157 F for 90 minutes.  Raised the temp to 170 and mashed out.  Boiled for 90 minutes.

 

  • 5 oz Kent Golding @ 90 min (82 IBU)
  • 1 oz Kent Golding @ 45 min (16 IBU)
  • 1-1/2 oz Fuggles & Irish Moss @ 15 min
  • 1 oz Fuggle @ 5 min

 

  • Pitched with a starter of Wyeast 1099 Whitbread Ale (1st generation yeast).  I set up a blow-off tool, and wow did I need it.  The yeast was very contently chugging away the next day.
  • 01-18-09: Racked to the secondary and dryhopped with 2 oz of Fuggles. 1.030 gravity.
  • 01-31-09: added a second dose of Whitbread yeast slurry from another batch of beer.
  • 02-23-09: Yeast is still slowly chugging along.  The air from the airlock smells very hot, hopefully this will fade. 1.026 gravity.
  • 03-28-09: Hot smell has faded.  The beer was a nice warming taste to it. 1.020 gravity.
  • 04-11-09: Bottled with ¾ cup priming sugar.  1.020 final gravity.

 

  • OG: 1.100
  • FG: 1.020
  • ABV: 10%

 

  • Tastings:
  • 06-03-09: Not too overboard with malt or hops, the beer could actually handle a bit more of either.
  •  09-15-09: Too malty.  I would like it to be dryer and with a bit more bitterness.
  • 01-14-11: Just over 2 years since this was brewed and it really found its groove.  Could still use more bitterness for my taste, but for the style (English Barleywine) it’s pretty spot-on.  Malt and hops really compliment each other.

 

  • Results: Over the aging process this beer really changed.  It started a bit low key, then the maltiness took over (I don’t really like malty beers, so I was unhappy at this point) and ended up being a pretty solid, well rounded beer.I learned an important lesson.  When it comes to beer, especially big beers, patience really is huge and will pay you back.  I know it is cliche to say ‘your beer is ready to drink when you pop open the last one’, but in the case of big beers it really is true.

 

  • Comments:  For my barleywines I like to minimize the amount of specialty grains and use a higher quality base grain like Maris Otter or ESB for 25% to 50% of the grain bill.  With a barleywine you have such a large amount of grain and hops that you can easily overcomplicate a recipe by adding a bunch of specialty grains.

Batch #30: Oatmeal Stout

Posted by – 2011-01-16

2010JAN15

- 8lb American 2-Row
- 4lb Flaked Oats
- 1lb Munich
- 1lb Chocolate Malt (English 2-Row)
- 1/2lb Roasted Barley (English 2-Row)

~5g mash water, strike @ 175*F

one step infusion mash 60min

??g sparge water 175*F, collecting 6g

Boil

60min:
1oz Centennial (8.7%)
1oz Cascade (6.0%)

15min:
1oz Cascade (6.0%)

0min:
1oz Centennial (8.7%)
1 1/8oz ground coffee (Whole Foods Market/Winter Blend)

OG: 1.065

Pitched 1 packet Safale US-05

(Source, PDF)

2010JAN21

Transferred to secondary
SG: 1.020
Pitched 1 pkg Red Start Pasteur Champagne

NOTE: Roast malt aroma and flavor, then coffee notes, and a crisp hop bite.

2010JAN29

FG: 1.019 (6.59% ABV)
Primed with 1 1/4 cup Munton Light (DME)

48 12oz bottles (!)

NOTE: Rich coffee malt flavor. Bitter roasted malt turns to bitter hops.

[TASTING] KF’s Hoppy Brown Ale

Posted by – 2010-12-23

Pours clear. Brown with red hue. Head quickly fades to reasonable lace. Did not notice hop aroma, possibly due to my lingering cold. Roasty malt flavor at first with a quick transition to clean bitterness. I was trying to find a “band-aidy” flavor. Maybe I imagined it there between the malt and the hop. If anything, there was a herbal quality to the hop flavor.

Nice combination of roasted barley and hops. I’ve had worse phenolic flavors, surely.

Poured from a 12oz. bottle.

Batch #29: IPA

Posted by – 2010-11-28

2010NOV27

- 13lb American 2 Row
- 1lb Crystal 20L

~4.5g mash water, strike @ 175F

one step infusion mash 60min

~4.5g sparge water @ 175F, collecting 6g

Boil

60min:
1oz Northern Brewer pellets (11.0%)

0min:
1oz Cascade plugs (7.3%)

OG: Unknown

Pitched White Labs California Ale Yeast WLP001

NOTES
Brew day complicated by children. Excessive boil over, resulting in a finished volume of less than 5 gallons. Also neglected to measure the specific gravity. Since it’s not yet fermenting, I may still be able to get a reasonable reading.

2010DEC??

Racked to secondary.
2oz Centennial pellets (?%)

2010DEC19

FG 1.021

Primed with 3/4 cup brown sugar
34 12oz bottles

2010DEC23

Overly effervescent. Thick head, pours cloudy, golden. Piney hop aroma. Sweet malt flavor then a hop rush. Piney bitterness lasts and lasts. Cloying? Maybe.

2010JAN26

Chill excessively. Open at sink. Barely ease up the cap. Let all gas escape. Pour, gently, gently. Pours an insane head. Head never really disappears, it subsides, as thick as shaving cream. Grassy, apricot, hop aroma. Fully carbonated. Cloudy, yeast and flecks of hops. Rich mailt flavor, then quickly piney, astringent hop-flavor. Not flabby, there’s a malt backbone. Pucker-inducing, highly hopped.

American Rye and Wheat Beer

Posted by – 2010-07-25

Batch #9 needs a snappy name, but my beer marketing department is on the West Coast at a conference, so for now this one is retaining its boring development name.  If TGL were here, it’d have a greek myth name at least.

Threw this recipe together myself, with nothing more than the BJCP style guidelines for “American Wheat or Rye Beer” (I told you I needed a more imaginative name).

Stats:

  • OG: 1.047
  • FG: 1.012
  • IBU: 18
  • ABV: 4.7
  • SRM: 5* (Yellow to Gold)

Greedys

  • 5.5 lbs US 2-Row Pale Malt
  • 2 lbs Rye Malt
  • 1.5 lbs Wheat Malt
  • 1 lb Crystal 20
  • 1 lb Rice Hulls (damn slow sparges!!)
  • 0.5 oz x 8.7% AA Amarillo Pellets @60 min
  • 0.2 oz x 7.5% AA Cascade Pellets @ 15 min
  • Wyeast 1010 American Wheat

After two not-so-great brew sessions with the stupid Blue Moon clone, I felt like I needed another shot at a beer with some wheat in it.  That said, I’m still a little gun shy around non-barley grains, so i kept this one well below 50% wheat and rye.  I wanted to try the three stage mash again (beta glucanase rest to break down the gum, protease to break down some proteins, and saccharification to make some sugar), but because of the difficulty i had last time trying to accomplish all that with hot water infusions into my 5 gal cooler, I decided to try stovetop mashing in my brewpot, then transferring to the cooler for the sparge.

Mash Schedule

  • Beta Glucanase rest: 20 min at 110*F
  • Protease rest: 20 min at 122*F
  • Saccharification: 3o min at 154*F

I went with 15 quarts of water, which is about all I figured i could safely expect to fit into my 5 gal cooler.  I heated it to 115*F and added the grist.  that brought me damn close to the target 110*F, and I was suprised to find that it only made up about 5 gal of wort (I was expecting closer to 5.5 gal).

Wary of slow sparges from thick mashes, I decided to add a quart of boiling water as part of my heating to the second rest.  that got me about half way, and I fired up the stove for the rest, stirring periodically.  It took about 5 minutes to come up to 122*F by my probe thermometer, then I killed the stove.

Every few minutes i’d stir and take a temp reading or six.  even at ~1.5 qts/lb, there were hot and cool spots in the mash, and apparently the heating process had left some hot pockets down low that I didn’t know about, because 10 min into the rest, the measured temp was now ~8-10*F too hot, right at the upper limit of the protease range.

After the 20 minutes were up, i fired up the stove again on the way to 154*F.  I stopped the stove when I got a reading of 150, wary of overshooting.  Turns out i should have stopped much sooner, because a few minutes later I was getting readings in the 165-170 range.  Yikes! Thats the temp where the enzymes I need start dying off (or whatever it is that enzymes do when they stop working).  In goes two trays of ice cubes.  They melt.  temps still in the 160-167 range.  Oh well.

Wait.  This thermometer isn’t working right.  My fantastic “Super Fast Thermopen” isn’t working right…at all.  I switch to the cheap probe on the kitchen timer, and it turns out that the mash is actually around 135*F.  WTF. Back on the stove.  My planned 30 minutes for this rest have come and gone, but i give it another 20 more on the stove, stirring and heating.  When the readings get to 145-155*F, I called it quits and poured it all into the cooler to lauter.  We’re winging it now.  It JUST fit.

This sparge FLEW.  Turns out rye isn’t nearly as unruly as wheat and oats (or so it seems).  Sparged with 17qts water at ~168*F.  Collected so much wort that i needed to dump some.

Boil was thankfully uneventful.  Chilling takes forever.  I need to upgrade from my 25ft immersion cooler. Maybe i’ll make a new one out of 50ft, or maybe i’ll get a fancy counterflow guy.  This is just a lot of waiting, and a lot of wasted water.  I’ve already mopped the floors, watered the plants, and refilled the toilet tank with chiller outflow, now the rest is going down the drain.

90 minutes of chilling, poured off the trub, yielding about 4.8 gal at a corrected OG of 1.046. Pitched Wyeast 1010 American Wheat at about 80*F.

UPDATE 2010-07-24

Came back from a day at the beach, opened the apartment door and smelled beer. The ferment went wild and blew out through the airlock, making a nice pool of near beer on the floor.  First time that’s happened, extra surprising given the couple extra inches of headspace this time from the slightly smaller batch.

Blue Moon Clone Revisited

Posted by – 2010-07-23

I’ll call this batch 8.1.  Brew Day was 2010-07-07

After the disastrous outcome of the previous attempt at brewing this Blue Moon clone recipe, I went back to John Palmer’s How To Brew to see if I could figure out where I’d gone wrong.

One of the things that I picked up was that the protein rest (that I’d recollected was so important for mashes with a high percentage of wheat and unmalted grain in the bill) actually doesn’t do much to avoid stuck sparges, as I’d thought.  Either I read it wrong the first time or I’d made it up in my head.  Turns out there’s a Beta Glucanase rest that is supposed to prevent gumminess.  I decided for the second attempt that I’d include this Beta Glucanase rest.  Also, I added 1 lb of rice hulls for some drainage.

My Beta Glucanase rest was to be 110*F for 20 min, Protease rest 122*F for 20 min, and finally the main event at 154*F for 30 min.

I came out a little hot for the Beta Glucanase at 118, hit my temp for the Protease rest pretty well, and did pretty well on the saccharification rest.

The thing is, I had to do all of this in a 5 gal rubbermaid drink cooler, which doesn’t leave much room for water when you’ve got 11 lbs of grain.  Also, since i’m doing infusion mashing, and wanted three different temperatures, my first rest was super stiff at 8 qts water to 11 lbs grain (so that i could add water to hit my second and third rests).

After all that work, the sparge was still slow as hell (90 minutes to collect 4.5 gal).  I started brewing after work (always a dumb idea), and I didn’t pitch the yeast until 2:30 AM.  I was a tired, grumpy dude, but I wasn’t about to give up on a second shot at this.

The first taste on the way into the primary fermenter had a sharply bitter finish, maybe from the bitter orange peel.  I hoped it would mellow out.

When i racked to secondary on 7-19, the bitterness may have eased a bit.  It also seemed a bit estery, probably due to the warm temps we’ve been having. My fermentation temp had been 78-80 *F, pretty damn high.

Blue Moon Mash Disaster

Posted by – 2010-06-23

mac batch #8 (but don’t wait around for the tasting results)

I blew it tonight.

Followed the recipe and mash schedule for Austin Homebrew’s Blue Moon clone, reprinted on homebrewtalk.com

The mash was a mess.  First off, the AH mash schedule yields a super loose mash by the time you’re done (1.7 quarts/lb), which makes establishing clear runnings a real pain in the ass, cause the grain bed doesn’t settle out.

Secondly, despite hitting my protein rest temp dead on, and double checking the second infusion calculations to go from the protein rest to the saccrification rest, I ended up 10*F too hot for my saccrification.  Instead of my target of 158*F, i ended up closer to 170*F.   Total mystery as to why.

Lastly, when the runnings finally cleared out a bit (though still plenty cloudy from all the wheat and such), the sparge slowed to a trickle.  At this point, it was late at night, and the thought of waiting around 2 hours for the sparge to finish, just to wait another 2 for the boil and chill, sounded like madness.  I dumped the grains.  Screw it.

My dear girlfriend really wants a blue moon clone, however, so i’m gonna have to try this one again.  Next time:

  • get the mash temps right
  • use rice hulls to try to keep the sparge moving
  • maybe use less water for the protein rest, so that the final mash won’t be so loose
  • don’t fuck it up

[TASTING] Revolution Brewing Anti Hero IPA

Posted by – 2010-06-11

revbrew.com

Pours red-tinged copper. White head. Big hop nose. Round malt flavor, smooth, with big citrus hop finish. Decent lacing. Did I say citrusy? Piney too. Malt backbone keeps it smooth.

Poured from a growler.

Batch 27: American Wheat

Posted by – 2010-05-31

2010MAY31

- 5lb 2-Row Pale
- 5lb Wheat
- 1 lb Munich
- 1/2lb Crystal 10L

~4g mash water, strike @ 165*F

one step infusion mash 60min @ 152*F

~6g sparge water @ 175*F

Boil

60min:
0.5oz Northern Brewer
0.5oz Saaz

15min:
0.5oz Saaz

0min:
0.5oz Saaz

OG: 1.043

Pitched White Labs California Ale Yeast (WLP001)

(source)

2010JN10

Racked to secondary.

SG: 1.004

NOTES: My sample was fairly clear. Low hop aroma. Not very wheaty, there’s a bit of a medicinal flavor at the finish.

2010JN16

FG: 1.004 (5.95%)

Primed with 3/4 cup brown sugar

54 12oz bottles

[TASTING] Revolution Brewing Eugene Porter

Posted by – 2010-05-31

http://revbrew.com

Pours black, with coffee-colored head. Head subsides to a fine lace on the glass. Dark roast nose, a hint of chocolate. Smooth, even roast flavor. Any hops bitterness is absent, the malt dominates. Coffee finish.

Poured from a growler, hand delivered from the brewery.