Friday, November 28, 2014

Dubbel Brewday 11/23

I needed a cider version 2 (Louisburg; pasteurized but no sorbates, so the yeast should love it) and to knock out one of those kits I had. I settled on brewing Northern Brewer's La Petite Orange.

Here's the spread: Malt extract, Wyeast smack pack of 1214 Belgian Abbey,
specialty grains, soft candi sugar, worksheet.

Monday, September 1, 2014

First Hop Harvest

Three hop rhizomes were purchased in back in April and planted in early May: two Cascades and a Centennial. One failed to come up and one I think was on its way up but got dug up or died or something, so I only had one Cascade make it:
The single brave Cascade, climbing up a line on May 31st.
Tomatoes in the foreground.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Bottling, Bottling, and Dry Hopping

Multiple topics here: on Feb 5, I bottled the robust porter and the cider. Then on Feb 9, I dry hopped the Kansas City Pale Ale and racked it to secondary (even though it's not necessary and sometimes not worth the risk even you dry hop or add fruit or things - discussion and more discussion).
Pale ale being siphoned into the carboy for secondary fermentation.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Robust Porter Update

This is an update to the Robust Porter I brewed on January 11.

I checked the specific gravity today; it's a little high. It's been in the fermenter for 3 weeks now, and it the SG is 1.022. The target FG is 1.15. Maybe I didn't oxygenate enough? Maybe not enough yeast made it from the yeast bag into the narrow mouth of the carboy (there was some that got stuck on the funnel)? I think it tastes fine, though. Very dark, not much hoppiness. I don't know if that's a result of the partial boil, the high gravity, the altered hop schedule, the recipe itself, or what. I'm not experienced enough to know if it definitely tastes good, since right now it's flat and about 60 degrees, and when I drink it for real it will be carbonated and a bit colder. Conditioning should help it out as well. Good news, though: I don't think I can taste that I burned the wort.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Brewday January 26, 2014

The Plan:
Brew a "Kansas City Pale Ale" kit from Bacchus and Barleycorn.
Unlike last time, this was a full boil. Brewing happened outdoors (hurray for sixty degree January days) on a propane turkey fryer. I think I need one. And a giant kettle with a valve and thermometer built in.
In the glass: Sierra Nevada "Ruthless Rye" and New Belgium's not-as-good-as-Dig spring seasonal "Spring Blonde".
Large kettle on a propane turkey fryer, water and an immersion chiller in the background.
Frigid winter hose water cools the hot wort down super fast.


The Problems:
I don't know if there were any problems on the brewing side, but cool color tone croquet team definitely had some issues.
Blue/Black/Green getting utterly crushed Red/Yellow/Orange.

There was one issue that I was worried about going in, though. I just purchased a refractometer, so I got to measure brix, which is a proxy for specific gravity. It's more or less 1/4th of the specific gravity, but that relationship breaks down at higher specific gravities. My refractometer measured 15.2 percent brix, which matched up nicely with the 60 points that the hydrometer measured. The best part about that is that the refractometer only takes a couple of drops instead of the entire test jar for the hydrometer.
Hopefully not a problem: we saved the final hops (1/2 oz of East Kent Golding hops) and are going to add them when we go to secondary.
I guess we also need to keep track of temperature when we pitch. I've heard that makes a difference. I think this might have been 76 degrees.

Temperature since pitching the yeast. I don't know if this will update automatically as I add more info to the plot.
Note: it does. I clicked "Publish chart" - "Interactive chart" - copy/pasted the java script into the HTML of the page.


The Results:
Brewed on January 26, 2014
OG: 1.055 (target)
OG: 1.060 (actual)
FG: 1.016 (target)

Fermenting in a 6+ gallon ale pail with blowoff tube installed.
It's boiling furiously, but you can't hear it because it is simply a picture.
I should have signed up for Vine.

Plans for the future involve some small batches of all grain (refractometer will help with this), growing hops, making a counterflow wort chiller, figure out some sort of basic temperature control, etc.

Friday, January 24, 2014

Brewday January 11, 2014

The Plan:
Brew a "Robust Porter" from Brewing Classic Styles. Unfortunately, I am only equipped to do partial boils, so I have to top off my carboy with plain water after boiling my wort.
All of the ingredients and my recipe book laid out nicely.
The jug is Star San. I don't remember what is in that glass.