Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Holiday Ale Brewday

A buddy of mine and I have each brewed a spiced beer. We plan to split the batches so that we each get half of each batch. I brewed a Happy Holiday Ale, which was a kit from Midwest Supplies. This was my first use of a pre-packaged kit. The whole process is pretty easy since you are spared having to go to the shop, measure the ingredients, crush the grain etc. But of course you probably pay a slightly higher price for the ingredients and you have to pay the potentially large ($15+) shipping charge. In this case however I had a discount code that essentially reduced the price of the items I bought by a greater amount than the shipping charge.

In any case, the recipe and directions are available in .PDF from Midwest. The instructions were a bit vague and did not specify the exact strike water volume or temp to use. I ended up at an initial mash temp of 142F and had to add some boiling water to bring the mash to 152F, still a little under. Ug. I don't like the extra stress that causes on brew day and I hope the beer finishes with the appropriate sweetness.

Brewed 10/16/15
Got OG of 1.062. On the low end but OK. Volume into carboy was 5.3 gallons or so.

It was smelling really nice after the addition of cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger to the boil.

For this one I pitched S-04 slurry left over from my previous brown porter. I didn't make a starter but just pitched the slurry directly from the Mason jar to the wort. The beer fermented at around 68F ambient air, and fermentation seemed to pick up very fast after pitching - like within a few hours.

11/17/15 - Racked to secondary. Beer tasted OK but not great. Gravity was 1.010. Plan to bottle in early December.


West Coast Amber

I've never brewed the American Amber style before but I thought it would be nice for the Fall weather. This one is the "West Coast Blaster" from Brewing Classic Styles and is supposed to be a fairly bold, hoppy, and very flavorful example of the style.

Recipe Specifications
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Boil Size: 6.88 gal
Post Boil Volume: 5.88 gal
Batch Size (fermenter): 5.25 gal  
Bottling Volume: 4.85 gal
Estimated OG: 1.072 SG
Estimated Color: 17.2 SRM
Estimated IBU: 64.7 IBUs
Brewhouse Efficiency: 68.00 %
Est Mash Efficiency: 73.2 %
Boil Time: 60 Minutes

Ingredients:
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Amt                   Name                                     Type          #        %/IBU        
11 lbs 4.0 oz         Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2.0 SRM)           Grain         1        72.9 %       
2 lbs                 Munich Malt (9.0 SRM)                    Grain         2        13.0 %       
1 lbs                 Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L (40.0 SRM)    Grain         3        6.5 %        
8.0 oz                Caramel/Crystal Malt -120L (120.0 SRM)   Grain         4        3.2 %        
8.0 oz                Victory Malt (25.0 SRM)                  Grain         5        3.2 %        
3.0 oz                Chocolate Rye Malt (250.0 SRM)           Grain         6        1.2 %        
0.50 oz               Columbus (Tomahawk) [17.50 %] - First Wo Hop           7        29.7 IBUs    
0.15 oz               Warrior [15.70 %] - First Wort 60.0 min  Hop           8        8.0 IBUs     
1.00 oz               Cascade [4.50 %] - Boil 10.0 min         Hop           9        5.0 IBUs     
1.00 oz               Centennial [11.60 %] - Boil 10.0 min     Hop           10       13.0 IBUs    
1.00 oz               Cascade [4.50 %] - Steep/Whirlpool  10.0 Hop           11       2.5 IBUs     
1.00 oz               Centennial [11.60 %] - Steep/Whirlpool   Hop           12       6.5 IBUs     
1.0 pkg               Safale American  (DCL/Fermentis #US-05)  Yeast         13       -            


Mash Schedule: 154F, Batch Sparge, Mash Out
Total Grain Weight: 15 lbs 7.0 oz
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Name                    Description                                          Step Temperat Step Time    
Mash Step               Add 21.70 qt of water at 167.3 F                     154.0 F       60 min       
Mash Step               Add 12.35 qt of water at 197.1 F                     168.0 F       10 min       

Sparge: Batch sparge with 2 steps (Drain mash tun , 0.82gal) of 168.0 F water
Notes:
------

Brewed 10/11
Preboil OG 14.4B, 1.059
Postboil OG: 18.8B, 1.077

Got ~5.5 gallons into the fermenter. Placed at ~68F to ferment.

Kegged on 10/22 with priming sugar, going for ~2.2 volumes.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Brett C Saison Review

Appearance: Billowing, dense and persistent white head. Body is light golden-yellow color. Chill haze but by no means muddy or unappealing.

Aroma: Earthy, with some lemony aroma and funkiness. Not especially strong. Hop aroma is very low but I think I smell some noble hop quality. As it warms a little the brett and fruity smells comes out better.

Taste: More complex than the nose. Starts fairly clean, with some fruit quality (maybe tart apples) but certainly not as fruity as the saisons I have brewed with WLP330.  Lightly bready wheat malts in the middle, slight yeastiness, and then some funky brett tastes. I don't think it has the "classic" brett tastes, but maybe some light acidity, dryness, and prickly quality. Almost tastes slightly tannic. Does not taste like a "clean" beer to me. Bitterness blends pretty well with the brett funk.

Mouthfeel:  Dry body, high-ish carbonation, and dry finish.

Overall: Not really sure what it is "supposed" to be so it's hard to judge. To me it's pleasant and Belgian-y but I think it could use a little more fruity quality. According to someone whose judgement I trust it has a classic Belgian quality.

I put ~2 gallons in bottles and ~3 in a keg. Will allow some bottles to age and see how they develop. 

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Brown Porter Review

Appearance: Very dark brown, but not quite black, with a lightly tan off-white head that has decent persistence. Lacing sticks to the side of my glass.

Aroma: Bready and roasty, but not intensely so. Malty but not sweet, and a little chocolatey. Hop aroma is present but subtle, and probably not quite the right type of British hop aroma. I don't get any yeast esters.

Taste: Again kind of bready, like the crust, and roasty-chocolatey. Sweetness is low-moderate but it's not dry. I don't really get much nutty character or a strong impression of biscuity Maris Otter character that would have come from using more of that malt, as was called for. No yeast-derived flavors that I can really detect. Bitterness is pretty evenly balanced with the malt, but I would say it is malt forward more than bitter. Smooth tasting, similar to a dark mild but more intense in character.

Mouthfeel: Smooth, low-moderate carbonation. Thinnish mouthfeel but the bready quality and sweetness prevent it from being thin. Like a dark mild but less watery.

Overall: Pretty pleasant, easy drinking and tasty. Would like to brew again but with more MO malt, and with a more characterful yeast expression.

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Oktoberfest Review

Appearance: Beautiful thick and persistent head with off-white brownish tinge. Color is deep brownish red. Some haze but this is one of the first few pours from the keg so the haze is likely to reduce over time. A pretty good-looking beer.

Aroma: Sweet, malty, bready and a little toasty. Hop aroma is none, and I don't get a sulfur, DMS or other smells of improperly fermented lager. It has a certain flavor note that has been common among all my lagers - I think a feature of the pilsner malt - and that I would describe as slightly corn-like but grainy malty and pleasant.

Taste: Pretty smooth. Malty, sweet and lightly toasty. Hop flavor is close to none but maybe a slight earthy or spicy noble-hop note. Clean lager taste. Flavorful but not intensely so. Bitterness is enough to balance the sweetness but the beer leans toward a malty, sweet note. Finishes a little more dry and malty than the initial taste.

Mouthfeel: Carbonation is moderate, body chewy but not heavy. Good for colder weather.

Overall: I like it a lot. Not sure how it will stack up to the exemplars of the style, but I will do a side-by-side tasting at some point soon.