So I'm 2/3 of the way through the first keg of the California Common posted here. And I figured I would update on how it came out... something I rarely do. This may be the best "to style" beer I have made... Crystal clear, I attribute to doing my first protein rest which I will be utilizing more in the future due to these results. Hop profile is great, though this is only a single hop beer, I think the use of first wort hops discussed here, gives a nice profile of everything the Northern Brewer hops have to offer... even though this fermented all the way down to 1.009, there is surprising body and balance to the hops, maybe this has to do with the protein rest as well? Head retention is good with some nice lacing... overall a very drinkable beer that profiles the hops nicely while not overpowering those not into IPA's... at least judging from the how much my brother-in-law enjoys it (and he dislikes IPA's)...
The second keg is naturally carbonated and is destined for my best friend's bachelor party... which is kind of a bummer because I selfishly want to keep it all for myself, but it will be nice to see how the "public" reacts to it...
Also, side note... Black Fri.P.A. is finally kicked... thank god. That underwhelming beer has been taking up valuable real estate in my kegerator for like 4 months... now I can keg and carb the India Pilsner Ale (also for bachelor party) and cold crash the second keg of California Common.
That's it for now... sorry no pics... my droid's camera has been acting funny lately... Later.
Hop River Ales
Documenting my homebrewing batches, projects, and beer related experiences.
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Saturday, March 31, 2012
Overdue Update and India Pilsner Ale Brewday...
I know... I know... it's been forever since I posted... sry.
Just to bring you up to date:
Black Fri.P.A. posted here and here... is still on tap...
Things I learned about black IPAs:
1. If I brew this in the future, more hops... especially aroma and dryhop... this came out more like a hoppy porter than anything IPA-ish.
2. Black IPA is kind of a novelty style... and ten gallons of black IPA is a lot. I get tired of the style quickly... If not for all the commercial bottles and wine I've been drinking to change things up, I might have ended up dumping or pulling the second keg out of the kegerator and sticking it in the corner for a few months... hence the reason that it's still on tap almost 3 months later.
California Common (aka Steam beer) posted here... is kegged and carbonating. To be honest I kinda forgot about this one while it was ferementing at 55 degrees, 8 weeks in primary and it finished at 1.009 from 1.054 which is kinda low for the style, but it was crystal clear and the gravity sample tasted great. I'm currently force carbonating one keg in my kegerator and I primed the other to naturally carbonate at ambient temps...
Cellar Party: A couple weeks ago, myself and a few of my beer geek friends got together and all brought old and/or rare bottles for a tasting party...
Over 150$ worth of beer, oldest bottle was from 2005... Among the beers tasted that night: New England Brewing Co. Imperial Stout Trooper (2011), Deschutes The Abyss (2007), Berkshire Brewing Co. Russian Imperial Stout (2011?), Rodenbach Vintage Oak Aged Ale Barrel No. 230 (2007), Brooklyn Brewery Black Ops (2011), DFH Noble Rot (2011), Coastal Extreme brewing Co. Newport Storm Barleywine (2005), Oskar Blues Ten Fidy (2011?), Laughing Dog Brewery The Dogfather (year?), DFH Olde School (2010), Alchemist Beer Heady Topper (one of the best IIPA's I've ever had...), Sierra Nevada Hoptimum (2012)
Good friends, tons of great beer... a great time was had by all... and I earned like 4 badges on Untappd. Great, great night.
India Pilsner Ale Brewday: About a year ago, at a local brewpub I had this great IPA made with all pilsner malt... it was hazy, super pale, and had a great floral and citrus hop profile. The brewmaster himself was kind enough to share the ingredients and target gravity with me, though he left weights and times up to me to figure out... I brewed a 5 gallon batch of this last year (before I started this blog) and it turned out great, one of my favorite homebrews to date. last Sunday I brewed up a ten gallon batch an it's currently fermenting in my closet at 65 degrees (my basement is still too cold for Ales...)
Here's the recap...
Recipe for 11 gallons:
26lbs German Pilsner Malt (I used Belgian last time but my brewstore was out)
Single infusion mash at 154 degrees (nailed strike temp this time.)
Double batch sparge, actually, doing a kinda combination batch/fly sparge now... my ten gallon igloo cooler won't fit enough water for a single batch sparge, so I dump in sparge water until the cooler is brimming, let sit about ten minutes and start draining... as it drains, i slowly add remaining sparge water to maintain full level... then let drain completely before repeating for second sparge.
90 minute boil (pilsner malt contains a lot of DMS, which will add a buttery creamed corn flavor... so the longer boil makes sure to drive all that out.)
start hop schedule with 60 minutes left in the boil...
60 minutes: 1.5oz Summit hops for bittering
30 minutes: 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for flavoring
5 minutes: 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for Aroma
Dryhop: each fermentor for 1 week with 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for Aroma
I didn't bother with Whirlfloc, with all that Pilsner Malt and no protein rest, there is no way this is going to clear anyway...
US-05 dry yeast... I tend to use clean simple dry yeast for hop and malt centric beers, I save the expensive liquid yeasts for Belgians and Steam Beer where the yeast is a major contributor flavor...
This brewday was a breeze... I'm really getting my ten gallon process down... total zen mode even though life is full of turmoil at the moment. Actually that's what I really love about brewing... aside from having a ready supply of good beer on tap in my own home, it's the actual process that I love. No matter what is going on in my life, no matter what I'm stressing or obsessing about, work... kids... whatever... it all goes away when I'm brewing, it really is like 6-8 hours of meditation for me. I feel physically exhausted (in a good way) and mentally recharged after a quiet brewday.
However, I did hit a few snags... My target gravity was 11 gallons at 1.070 gravity and I usually get 83% efficiency... I ended up with 12 gallons at 1.054 giving me 71% efficiency... I didn't get the boil off rate I was expecting so it ended up a little watered down, not sure why efficiency was so low (for me... I am aware that this is a perfectly acceptable efficiency for most All Grain brewers) it's nbd... the finished beer will just be lower alcohol, maybe a little less body, and hoppier... but hoppy is good, so...
To finish off... A wise man from my past once told me, "Life happens." Well, I am in the midst of a lot of personal turmoil and change... unfortunately some of those changes may affect the frequency of my brewing... hoping to do my best to brew when I can because brewing soothes my soul. But I will try to keep up on the blog when I can... thinking of doing some reviews of commercial brews... local brewpubs.. stuff like that...
Actually, if any commercial breweries out there would like me to blog reviews of their beers, I would be happy to oblige for a free sample or two... I did this for Bison Brewing Co., posted here... My contact info can be found on my profile... just throwing it out there...
Sorry no lolz... not feeling lolzy... self reflection is where it's at right now. That's it for today... I'll be around... Later.
Just to bring you up to date:
Black Fri.P.A. posted here and here... is still on tap...
Things I learned about black IPAs:
1. If I brew this in the future, more hops... especially aroma and dryhop... this came out more like a hoppy porter than anything IPA-ish.
2. Black IPA is kind of a novelty style... and ten gallons of black IPA is a lot. I get tired of the style quickly... If not for all the commercial bottles and wine I've been drinking to change things up, I might have ended up dumping or pulling the second keg out of the kegerator and sticking it in the corner for a few months... hence the reason that it's still on tap almost 3 months later.
California Common (aka Steam beer) posted here... is kegged and carbonating. To be honest I kinda forgot about this one while it was ferementing at 55 degrees, 8 weeks in primary and it finished at 1.009 from 1.054 which is kinda low for the style, but it was crystal clear and the gravity sample tasted great. I'm currently force carbonating one keg in my kegerator and I primed the other to naturally carbonate at ambient temps...
Cellar Party: A couple weeks ago, myself and a few of my beer geek friends got together and all brought old and/or rare bottles for a tasting party...
Over 150$ worth of beer, oldest bottle was from 2005... Among the beers tasted that night: New England Brewing Co. Imperial Stout Trooper (2011), Deschutes The Abyss (2007), Berkshire Brewing Co. Russian Imperial Stout (2011?), Rodenbach Vintage Oak Aged Ale Barrel No. 230 (2007), Brooklyn Brewery Black Ops (2011), DFH Noble Rot (2011), Coastal Extreme brewing Co. Newport Storm Barleywine (2005), Oskar Blues Ten Fidy (2011?), Laughing Dog Brewery The Dogfather (year?), DFH Olde School (2010), Alchemist Beer Heady Topper (one of the best IIPA's I've ever had...), Sierra Nevada Hoptimum (2012)
Good friends, tons of great beer... a great time was had by all... and I earned like 4 badges on Untappd. Great, great night.
India Pilsner Ale Brewday: About a year ago, at a local brewpub I had this great IPA made with all pilsner malt... it was hazy, super pale, and had a great floral and citrus hop profile. The brewmaster himself was kind enough to share the ingredients and target gravity with me, though he left weights and times up to me to figure out... I brewed a 5 gallon batch of this last year (before I started this blog) and it turned out great, one of my favorite homebrews to date. last Sunday I brewed up a ten gallon batch an it's currently fermenting in my closet at 65 degrees (my basement is still too cold for Ales...)
Here's the recap...
Recipe for 11 gallons:
26lbs German Pilsner Malt (I used Belgian last time but my brewstore was out)
Single infusion mash at 154 degrees (nailed strike temp this time.)
Double batch sparge, actually, doing a kinda combination batch/fly sparge now... my ten gallon igloo cooler won't fit enough water for a single batch sparge, so I dump in sparge water until the cooler is brimming, let sit about ten minutes and start draining... as it drains, i slowly add remaining sparge water to maintain full level... then let drain completely before repeating for second sparge.
90 minute boil (pilsner malt contains a lot of DMS, which will add a buttery creamed corn flavor... so the longer boil makes sure to drive all that out.)
start hop schedule with 60 minutes left in the boil...
60 minutes: 1.5oz Summit hops for bittering
30 minutes: 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for flavoring
5 minutes: 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for Aroma
Dryhop: each fermentor for 1 week with 1oz of Cascade and 1oz of Centennial hops for Aroma
I didn't bother with Whirlfloc, with all that Pilsner Malt and no protein rest, there is no way this is going to clear anyway...
US-05 dry yeast... I tend to use clean simple dry yeast for hop and malt centric beers, I save the expensive liquid yeasts for Belgians and Steam Beer where the yeast is a major contributor flavor...
This brewday was a breeze... I'm really getting my ten gallon process down... total zen mode even though life is full of turmoil at the moment. Actually that's what I really love about brewing... aside from having a ready supply of good beer on tap in my own home, it's the actual process that I love. No matter what is going on in my life, no matter what I'm stressing or obsessing about, work... kids... whatever... it all goes away when I'm brewing, it really is like 6-8 hours of meditation for me. I feel physically exhausted (in a good way) and mentally recharged after a quiet brewday.
However, I did hit a few snags... My target gravity was 11 gallons at 1.070 gravity and I usually get 83% efficiency... I ended up with 12 gallons at 1.054 giving me 71% efficiency... I didn't get the boil off rate I was expecting so it ended up a little watered down, not sure why efficiency was so low (for me... I am aware that this is a perfectly acceptable efficiency for most All Grain brewers) it's nbd... the finished beer will just be lower alcohol, maybe a little less body, and hoppier... but hoppy is good, so...
To finish off... A wise man from my past once told me, "Life happens." Well, I am in the midst of a lot of personal turmoil and change... unfortunately some of those changes may affect the frequency of my brewing... hoping to do my best to brew when I can because brewing soothes my soul. But I will try to keep up on the blog when I can... thinking of doing some reviews of commercial brews... local brewpubs.. stuff like that...
Actually, if any commercial breweries out there would like me to blog reviews of their beers, I would be happy to oblige for a free sample or two... I did this for Bison Brewing Co., posted here... My contact info can be found on my profile... just throwing it out there...
Sorry no lolz... not feeling lolzy... self reflection is where it's at right now. That's it for today... I'll be around... Later.
Friday, January 27, 2012
California Common Brewday (In Over My Head and Total Cagematch)
So after the troubles with fermentation temps in my basement, I decided to brew something that would that would be ideal for the cold winter temps..
I had a year old sample of Wyeast 2112 (a lager yeast that thrives from 58 to 68 degrees) sitting in the fridge for almost a year. I successfully built up the sample with two steps of starters giving me enough yeast to pitch into a 10 gallon batch. So, given the fact that my basement was 58 degrees, and I happened to have just the right yeast sitting around, I decided to brew a California Common. (Think Anchor's Steam Beer)
I have brewed this style before (it was even my first extract brew) but I decided to start from scratch on the recipe, just so I could call it my own... First I'll give you the ingredients of the recipe, disclaimer: I typically get 83-ish % efficiency, you may need to adjust to your own efficiency.
For 11 gallon batch:
17 lbs 2row
2.5 lbs Crystal 60L
60 minute boil:
1.75 oz Northern Brewer pellet hops 12.3% AA FWH
1 oz Northern Brewer whole leaf hops9.2% AA 20min
1 tablet Whirlfloc 20min
1 oz Northern Brewer whole leaf hops 9.2% AA 5min
0.25 oz Northern Brewer pellet hops 12.3% AA 5min
First of all, I got a grain mill for Christmas... I was excited to use it for the first time, but I get such great efficiency from the crush at my brewstore, I was a little worried about not crushing fine enough and getting poor efficiency or crushing too fine and getting a stuck sparge. Actually this was the one part of the brewday that went perfectly... my normal high efficiency and no signs of a stuck sparge.
A tip I read on the message boards, I used a credit card to measure the gap on the rollers of my grain mill. I then ran a little bit of grain through and made small adjustments until I liked the look of the crush.
New mill ready to go, full hopper and drill hooked up to drive shaft to make milling faster and easier...
Close up view of the resulting crush, really happy with results. I think I will probably never mess with the settings again...
Normally with All Grain using a cooler for the Mash Tun, you would mix a measured amount of hot water at a certain temp with your grain and hope to hit your conversion rest temp (like 154 degrees) and then leave it there foe 60 minutes while conversion takes place. But... you can make it more complicated... You can do what's called a step mash. A simple example for a step mash would be to mash in at 133 degrees for the protein rest (protein rest can add body and clarity) and let it rest for 20 or so minutes, then raise the temp to your normal conversion rest (154 in this case), rest for an hour, then mash out and continue per usual.
There are a few ways to raise that temp, I'll only talk about those using a cooler where adding external heat with a burner is not an option (bc that's how I roll)...
For a simple step mash you would mash in to 133 with a very thick mash (I like 1.125 quarts of water per pound of grain) let it rest, then calculate how much boiling water (212 degrees obv) to add to bring it up to your target temp. Add that, stir it in, hit your conversion temp, and proceed with your normal process...
Also, there is a method called decoction... Mash in to 133 for your protein rest, with a normal grist to water ratio (say 1.5qt to 1lb grain) let rest, scoop out a measured amount of the mash (more grist than water) heat to conversion rest temp, let it rest a short period, then heat to boiling temp. Return decoction to main mash and this should bring the total mash temp up to your conversion temp...
I had never done either before this batch... I was going big and trying the decoction method, but did it work out?? not so much...
I mashed in at 1.125 qt/lb and hit my 133 degree protein rest. I let it rest 10 minutes while I pulled my decoction. Following the advice of my local brewstore, I used a colander to pull the decoction to keep it as dry as possible... I pulled 8 qts of grain and started heating over a low flame on my smaller turkey fryer while stirring constantly. Here were my issues in numbered list format:
1. due to dryness of grist, no matter how much I stirred, I could not get consistent temp readings...
2. no matter how much I stirred, the grist burned to the bottom of the pot. I think even the low flame was too hot... next time I'll do it on the stove.
3. when I thought I had most of the grist up to 212 degrees I added it back to the mash (leaving behind the burnt stuff) and it only brought my main mash temp up 2 degrees. Conversion will NOT happen at 135 degrees.
So... because I mashed in on the dry side I was able to add boiling water to the mash to bring up the temp, I hit 152 and let it rest for conversion. The downside of this, was that I had not calculated the additional strike water, so I had to compensate by reducing sparge water so I would still hit my desired preboil volume...
After that mess... I proceed with mash out (including First Wort Hops (discussed in Black Fri.P.A. Brewday)), sparge, boil with all hop additions as listed... Normally I use hop pellets because they are easy, but my brewstore only had 2 oz of Northern Brewer in pellets and I had to take the rest in whole leaf... Never. Freaking. Again. After chilling, I started to drain the keggle into the fermentors... The whole hops clogged it immediately. I tried using the siphon action of lifting the drain hose up to back flow and loosen things up... fail. I tried stirring things up with my brewing ladle while trying to drain... also fail. I tried washing and sanitizing my arm and reaching in to loosen things up... also also fail. I tried to use my autosiphon to siphon out of the keggle and into the fermentor, that clogged too... also also also fail. I ended up having to literally ladle 11 gallons of wort from the keggle to the fermentors... at least it was well aerated... So I had chilled all the way down to 60 degrees (I usually call it good at 70), this yeast likes it cold...
This brewday was a slugfest from beginning to end, but I think I came out the winner...I took gravity reading: 1.054, 81% efficiency, IBUs (international bittering units) calculated at 52.5, and color calculates at 10 degrees SRM... All that means is, so far, (I think) I have hit all the specs for the California Common style dead on. And with the long protein rest, whirlfloc, and high flocculation of the yeast strain, this should get super clear. And as a bonus, I picked up no hint of the burned grist in the gravity sample, though I'm keeping my fingers crossed for the final product...
Drinking my Black Fri.P.A tonight, which is fiiiinaly on tap after 8 weeks of slow fermentation. pretty happy with it, wishing for more hop aroma, thinking maybe of dryhopping in second keg, we'll see.
That's it for now... my hands are cramping, and if you read this far, I'm sure you've had enough... Later!
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