Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Smoked Porter #4

The Boston Homebrew Competition is coming up. This year, I have decided to enter a smoked porter, not just before it is a favorite style of mine, but also because my wife really likes it and because I think I can brew it relatively well.

For this brew, I'll be changing the recipe slightly in order to make it a little less sweet than my previous brew of this style. Last month I had a sample of Alaskan Smoked Porter, which was delicious, but less sweet than my own brew - not more acrid exactly, but a little roastier and dryer than my own. Basically, I knocked down the amount of Crystal malt a little, and added more chocolate and black-patent malt to achieve the desired dry-roasty quality, while keeping the base malt and the percentage of Cherry-smoked malt the same.

Smoked Porter #4
3 Gallons

5.125# US 2-Row
2.5# Cherry Smoked Malt
10oz Munich I
8oz Crystal 40
8oz Chocolate
6oz Crystal 90
5oz Black Patent Malt

1oz Goldings, 60min, pellet, 5% AA
.5 oz Willamette, 45min, 4.9% AA
.5oz Willamette, 10min, 4.9% AA
.5oz Goldings, 5min, 5% AA
.5oz Willamette, 5min, 4.9% AA

Expected OG / FG/ IBU/ ABV: 1.068, 1.017, 42, 6.6%

 Mash at 152F, 60 minute boil

Made a starter with washed US-05 on 1/19/14

Brewed 1/20/14

Mash temp was good, in the 152F -150F range depending on where in the mash I placed my thermometer. Used my 5-gallon round cooler with the CPVC manifold this time. No stuck sparges, though a pretty small leak in the manifold of the MLT.

Got about 4.25 gallons of pre-boil wort, at an OG of around 1.055.

Used a calibration stick to measure the volume of wort, and then adjusted the boil to try to hit my target volume. At the end of the boil, there was around 3.25 gallons of wort, so I seem to have measured things right.

Cooled, using the rig pictured, to around 90F, then racked to a PET carboy. Let stand in 35F - 40F ambient air for a few hours to cool. Pitched at around 65F, and let the  bottle sit in 62F ambient air. Fortunately this time the sump-pump was working properly.

Because I racked when the wort was still relatively hot, it was not as clear as I was hoping. I did leave about a quart of trub in the bucket, which I then poured into a pitcher. After a while some clear wort was on top - enough for a hydrometer sample reading 1.070. Yay, hit my target OG pretty spot-on.

2/2/14- Bottled today with 2 oz of sugar. Fermentation seemed to have been quick but did not generate a very large krausen, likely because of the restrained temperatures, in the 60F - 64F range. Measure FG at 1.018.

 

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Consecration Clone Recipe

So time for another long-term sour project. For this one, I took my clue from a clone kit available from MoreBeer.com, but made some variations to the recipe, and for reasons that will become apparent below, it's not likely to be an accurate clone of the target beer - Consecration, from Russian River Brewing.

This one may take about a year to eighteen months to be ready. The brewery's webpage says it is aged for 6-8 months, but I have heard that Roselare can take even longer to develop its full flavor.

Since this one takes so that long to be ready, it makes sense to brew a full batch. Most of the "work" associated with this one is storage, and since the beer will most likely improve with age, I don't have to worry about drinking it while fresh. So, this is my first 5 gallon batch.

Consecration Clone - 5 Gallon

11# Belgian Pilsner
1# Light malt extract
1# Brown Sugar
1# D-45 Candi syrup
8oz Acid Malt
4oz Carafa I
4oz Special B

.5 oz Styrian Goldings, 90min
1 oz Styrian Goldings, 30min
.5 oz Styrian Goldings, 1 min

Wyeast 1214 - Abbey Ale
Wyeast Roselare mix

2# black currants, secondary
2.5 oz Cabernet Sauvignon soaked oak cubs, secondary

Age ~ 1 year.

Mash at 158F, mash out, infuse with ~175F water for mashout temp of about 165F.

Expected OG / FG / IBUs: 1.071 / 1.018 / 16 / 6.9%

Brewed - 1/12/14

Hit my mash temps pretty well, both for the mash and the mash-out, but using my large square MLT, I realized that it has quite some dead space, so I was under-volume for the boil. As a result, I added about .75 gal to the boil in order to allow for boil-off over the course of 90 minutes.

The boil went fine, but at the end, the submersible sump-pump I've been using to push cool water through my chiller would not turn on. There seemed to be some type of electrical fault, as the power brick has a TEST / RESET button that wouldn't go to normal operation. Electricity and water should not be mixed. So instead, I filled a big grey bin full of cold water and put the brewpot in there. This was the same method I used before I got my chiller.

In any case, I left the beer like that at around 4pm, in the 40F weather. By around 10pm the beer was at 60F, so I transferred to the fermenter and pitched the WY1214. I got about 5.25 gallons. Unfortunately, I had not made a starter, although I had taken the yeast out of the fridge and popped the smack-pack earlier that day.

I took the fermenting bucket down to the basement where it was around 59F - 60F. That was probably too low. No bubbles on Monday afternoon, so I moved it to a warmer area where it was 62F. I didn't want it to get above 65F for the initial fermentation, in order to avoid hot alcohols, etc. from an overly vigorous fermentation in a higher-gravity wort.

1/114/14 - No signs of fermentation at all; even when I opened the bucket, I could not see any bubbles or krausen. So, thinking that the yeast had either fallen asleep or died or something, I just pitched the Roselare right in, even though that was not specified in the recipe. Oh well. I really didn't want the beer to get infected from a poor fermentation.

1/15/14 - Bubbling in the airlock, krausen forming. Yay!

2/5/14 - Transferred to a Better Bottle for secondary, but did not add currants or oak. There was the beginning of a pellicle starting to form when I opened the top of the bucket. The beer smelled good, and had a brownish appearance.  Did not take gravity reading. Placed in 68F-70F ambient air.

3/1/14 - Added the recycled yeast and a couple of oak cubes from my Flanders Red into the secondary. A few days later a brownish krausen seemed to appear on the surface of the beer. It has stayed there since.

3/31/14 - Added 2 pounds of organic raisins from Whole Foods. They had Zante currants, but on inspecting the ingredients I found that there was also peanut oil, vegetable oil, etc. in the container. I don't know why those were in there and I don't want oils in my beer. So I just used some raisins instead, which probably will have a fairly similar effect on the beer.

7/4/14 - Racked off the raisins into a tertiary container. Frustratingly, it was impossible to separate the raisins from the beer, resulting in about 1 gallon getting stuck and wasted. I am considering brewing a 1-gallon batch and starting a solera type thing.

6/11/15 - At some point a long time ago I did add some top-up beer. Bottled in mid May 15 with some wine yeast. A sample bottle tasted quite nice but was undercarbed. I hope I don't get bottle bombs. Now the bottles have pellicles, despite that there is (hopefully) very little sugar left for the microbes to ferment. Will open another bottle soon.




Thursday, January 9, 2014

Black Forest Stout Review

So...... Long time no post? Yes, yes indeed. The holidays have made me busy, and reduced my brewing activity, though not my drinking (and eating) activity, so much so that I went on a beer diet for a week.

Anyway, after a bit of a hiatus from posting here, I'm back with this review of my Black Forest Stout. 
Aroma: Hard to describe. To me it doesn't scream chocolate or cherry; you kind of have to pay close attention to find them in there. But I do get some dark chocolate notes and fruity cherry notes. I think the chocolate is more noticeable in the aroma.

Taste: I would say the acid / sourness and fruityness of the cherries dominate here. The acidity especially, as there seems to be little sweetness, or perhaps what sweetness there is has been dominated by the cherry / sour flavors. There's some bitter, unsweetened chocolate in there too, which is detectable but again you kind of have to search for it. The roasty or acrid character of a stout, to my pallet, does not really make an appearance.

Mouthfeel: Surprisingly, pretty thick and creamy, with low carbonation. A kind of weird, sour and chocolatey aftertaste.

Overall: It's drinkable and good, with a cherry kick, but not in balance and not chocolatey enough. My experience with fruit so far has been that it reduces the sweetness of the beer by adding a lot of unfermentable sugars and acidity, which causes the perceived sourness to increase. For this one, I would need to find some way to make it more chocolatey and better balanced with the cherry flavor. And, given the acidity of the cherries and the bitterness of unsweetened chocolate, it probably ought to be sweeter, just like a Black Forest Cake would be.