Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

Yeast- Everything Homebrew Review!


Two Saturdays back was the grand opening for Yeast-Everything Homebrew in Mt. Pleasant.   Finally, we have a homebrew shop and it's within 10 minutes of my house.  Sweet!  I made it out to the grand opening and I must say traffic in and out of the store was nice and steady.  It was good to see the local homebrewers come out and show their support.  Speaking of local homebrewers.  The local homebrewing club, The Low Country Libations (I am a proud a card carrying member) showed their support by brewing a batch of Belgian White.  It was an extract ingredient kit that is sold at the shop.  I arrived when they were just finishing up, and it smelled damn good!

Friday, October 11, 2013

Adventures in Homebrewing- Pumpkin Flavored Silver Linings


It was a total tragedy.  55 bottles of Southern Tier Pumking Clone down the drain, and just to twist the knife, they all had to be opened individually.  Pumking is my favorite Fall seasonal release, and I was looking forward to having a supply that would last me through the Autumn months.  It was not meant to be.  A gusher bug infected the entire batch, creating the geysers depicted here and making the beer taste like a mixture of vinegar and dishwasher detergent.  I was heartbroken.

As luck would have it, the next day Austin Homebrew Supply (AHS) released a limited edition pumpkin pie cream ale the very next day. Needless to say, I jumped on it.

A cream ale is a clean style, light in flavor and body. It utilizes a small amount of flaked maize as an adjunct, and consequently has a subtle flavor and aroma of corn. Basically, it’s an ale version of a light lager, which means it’s a good base on which to add other flavors. AHS’s kit adds canned pumpkin to the mash, along with pumpkin spice and orange peel for that distinctive aroma that your girlfriend swoons over at Starbucks during the months of September and October. It also adds in lactose for added body and sweetness and vanilla extract at bottling for an extra boost. Yeah, I’m excited too.

Here’s how it went.

This particular brew was extra special because it was the first time that I got to use my new grain mill for the entire batch. After a little bit of trial and error on calibrating the rollers, I got a pretty nice crush. Better efficiency, here I come!

                                    

                                    

First step is mashing in. I use the brew-in-a-bag (henceforth referred to as BIAB, us brewers love our abbreviations) method for my all-grain brewing. Instead of mashing in a separate mash tun, the brew kettle does triple duty as the hot liquor tun, the mash tun, and the brew kettle.  A large mesh bag is used to separate the grains from the liquor and, later, the sweet wort. It’s a cheap, easy way to make the leap to all-grain brewing, but at the expense of efficiency. 80% would be a very lofty goal for a BIAB brewer, and I usually float around 70%.

Next, in go the grains. Since I use BIAB, I mash in higher than one would in a typical system – about 175 F. This gives us a mash temperature of about 160 F. I mashed for 1 hour, stirring the crap out of the grains every 15 minutes.

                                      


After 60 minutes is up, out comes the bag using my totally awesome pulley system. I “sparge” the bag by spraying it down with the hose (yes, I use plain tap water, don’t judge me) until I hit my boil volume, then squeeze the remaining liquid out.

                                       

After the bag is "sparged," the burner goes back on to heat up to a boil.  Watch out for the hot break!

                                         

I use the hose on the mist setting to prevent boil-overs. Spray bottles work as well if you’re using spring water.

Timer starts after the hot break gets under control. You may notice the strange apparatus on top of my kettle now. It’s called a hop spider, and it’s a life saver for your beer’s clarity and yield. It separates hop matter and other boil additions from the wort without sacrificing all the wonderful flavors and aromas. When the boil is complete, simply pluck it out and empty the bag. It’s cheap and simple to make. 

Here is the hop schedule I used:

1 ounce Perle at 60 minutes

.75 ounces of Saaz, the pumpkin spice and orange peel, a Whirlfloc tablet (helps coagulate proteins that can make your beer cloudy) go in at 15 minutes.  Don’t forget to drop in your wort chiller to sterilize here.

.25 ounces Saaz and 1 pound lactose at 5 minutes

                                    

Time to cut the wort chilller on and keep it stirring until we hit about 80 F. Make sure you sterilize everything the beer touches from here on out. 

                                             

Once we hit pitching temp, I pour the beer back and forth from the kettle to the fermenter a few times to aerate the wort, then in goes the yeast. This particular strain is White Labs’ Cream Ale Blend. It’s a blend of ale and lager yeast and is a very clean-fermenting yeast, producing very little of the fruitiness or other yeast-derived characteristics that mark the ale styles.

That’s all for the brew day. My original gravity was 1.058, giving me 73% efficiency. That’s a record high for me, and very good for a BIAB setup. It was even .002 higher than what was on the directions sheet included with the kit!

This beer is currently in my closet fermenting away at 69 F. It’ll be there for another 5 days or so before it gets put in the bottle. I can’t wait for this one to turn out!

Posted By Reece LeMay



Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Adventures in Homebrewing C-3IPA




 This weekend I brewed the IPA recipe that Dave from The Lost Beers and I brewed last year.  You can check out that adventure here.  This is my favorite of all the beers that I've brewed, so this is actually the 3rd time brewing the recipe.  Each time, I adjust the hop schedule a bit just to make it a bit different.  The first time Dave and I brewed it, we used all Citra hops.  It was fan-freakin-tastic!  The 2nd time I brewed it (I didn't document it on the site), I used Cascade, Citra, and Pacific Jade hops.  I think it was even better!  I mean really....I thought I was I beer making genius.  This time, I went with Cascade, Citra, and Columbus hops.  Hence the name C-3IPA (the name was inspired by the classic Star Wars character C-3PO.  I hope this version, tops em' all!

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Adventures in Homebrewing- Brown Ale

Now that my son Max is 6 months old, I am now starting to find a little more time in my schedule to get back to homebrewing and blogging about it (as well as the Charleston craft beer scene).  Last weekend, my Assistant-brewer-in-law Joe C and I, brewed up a batch of our Brown Ale recipe.  We brewed this last September/October, and it came out so good we decided we needed to brew it again sooner than later.  We even entered it in the Palmetto State Brewers' Open, back in December.  Although it didn't place, it did score a 45 out of 50 on both of the judge's scorecards.  Must have been some stiff competition, as that is a really high score!  Oh well, better luck next time! Still a good homebrew.  We decided to keep all the malts the same, but to amp up the hop flavor/aroma.


Here's the recipe:

Brown Ale (5 gallon batch)
Malts
7 lbs Marris Otter
8 oz Caramel 60
8 oz Brown Malt
6 oz Victory
5 oz Chocolate Malt
4 oz Honey Malt

Hops
1/2 oz Magnum for 60 minutes
1/2 oz Simcoe for 10 minutes
1/2 oz Williamette for 10 minutes
1/2 oz Centennial for 5 minutes
1/2 oz Simcoe for 1 minute
1/2 oz Centennial for 1 minute
1/2 oz Williamette for 1 minute

Yeast
I re-used Wyeast 1098 British Ale yeast from our previous batch of Brown Ale

The brew day went great, although I was worried I would be a bit rusty since it's been a few months since I last brewed.  We mashed the malts for 1 hour at 151 degrees, and then fly sparged for about 75 minutes.  We collected a little over 6 gallons and ended up with just about 5 gallons of wort.  The Original Gravity was 1.056 and the IBU's are approximately 45.

Check out the pics from our brew day.







Stay tuned to see how this beer turns out!

PS I received these in the mail from Midwest the same day we brewed!  Can't wait to start kegging my beer.  Been bottling long enough!



Cheers!

Other Adventures!

Monday, July 23, 2012

Adventures in Homebrewing-Brewing with Dave from The Lost Beers!


This past weekend, my father in law and I brewed up a batch of beer with my friend David Fowlkes.  Dave is a former professional brewer, and used to brew at the The Mad Boar Restaurant and Brewery, which was located in North Myrtle Beach.  This brewpub has since closed, and David has moved on to working for Piggly Wiggly The Pig, and just homebrewing for fun!  Read more about David and The Mad Boar Restaurant and Brewery here.  In addition, he runs an awesome website called The Lost Beers.  The website states: "Our goal is to provide lost beer recipes from professional brewers across America to the home brewer. Our recipes have ALL been submitted by the actual brewers and are not “clone” recipes. Some of the recipes were submitted by the brewers in 5 gallon yield formats and some we have converted from the actual large batch size recipes." It's a website that I check out quite frequently!

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Brewing With The Frothy Beard Brewing Company!


Yesterday, I got the chance to brew with the guys from The Frothy Beard Brewing Company.  If you haven't heard of them, check out this post.  They are local guys looking to open up a brewery in the Charleston area in the near future.  I am also lucky to call them my friends.  We recently formed a "team" (we call ourselves the HopStars) and entered the "Iron Brew" Homebrewing Competition.  This is a homebrewing contest put on by Mellow Mushroom (King St. and Avondale) and Holy City Brewing.  They had a happy hour party in June, where they announced the "secret ingredient" that all homebrewers had to use in their recipe.   The "secret ingredient" turned out to be honey.   The "winner receives a Mellow-Holy City prize pack, and the grand prize of a limited edition production of the winning beer to be sold as a draft beer exclusively at Mellow Mushroom Avondale and Mellow Mushroom King St."  The judging will take place in early September.  We got all the ingredients for this brew day at Holy City Brewing, who now sell grains, yeast, and hops!


Friday, June 22, 2012

Adventures in Homebrewing-Saison Takes 2nd !

A few months back, my father in law (aka Assistant Brewmaster) took a shot at brewing our Saison again in hopes it would come out as good as the first, which won a 1st Place Ribbon in the Saison Category at the "Summer Suds In Savannah" Homebrewing Competition.  The second brewing of this recipe came out pretty damn good we thought, though a bit stronger in alcohol content than the first.  Shoot, I certainly didn't complain about that!  We entered it in Charleston's local homebrewing competition, The Colonial Cup, put on by the local Homebrewing Club (Lowcountry Libations).   The competition was held in April.  We ended up placing 2nd in Category 16, which is Belgian and French Ales.  I was definitely pumped about our Saison placing again!  It scored a 42 out of 50, and the beer that beat me was also a Saison which ended up winning "Best of Show."  Not too shabby!  This recipe is definitely a keeper!!! Here's the link to see the results of the entire competition.  Here are some pics of me, the beer, and the ribbon!







Other Adventures!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Adventures In Homebrewing- Hefeweizen!


This Saturday, I brewed up a Hefeweizen so I could have some easy drinking, good ol' summer beer on hand for those warm summer days and nights.  One of my favorite Hefeweizen's is Paulaner's Hefeweizen, followed by Hacker Pschorr, and Weihenstephan.  This beer is pretty easy to brew and I've always had good luck brewing this style of beer.  Here's the recipe that I went with:

Grains
5.5 lbs Weyerman Pale Wheat Malt
4 lbs German Pilsner Malt

Hops
1 oz. Tettnang (60 Min's)

Yeast
Wyeast 3068 Weihenstephan Weizen

Misc.
Irish Moss 15 Min's

The brew day went very well.  We mashed the grains for an hour at 151 degrees and collected about 6 gallons of wort.  We boiled for an hour, and cooled wort to about 75 degrees within 25-30 minutes.  I then pitched the yeast and it started bubbling within a few hours.  I will try and hold fermentation temp around 68 degrees, for first few days then let it creep up a bit closer to 72 degrees.   The Original Gravity was 1.048, which was right on target.  Here's some pics of the brew day!  We didn't get to fully document the day since the wifey had to steal the camera for her baby shower.  I guess baby took priority over beer!!!

Monday, March 5, 2012

DEAL ALERT!!! Home brewers and Wanna Be Home brewers Check This Out!


Now that I have your attention....I want to let you know that there is an AWESOME deal for Charleston residents on LivingSocial today that relates to Home Brewing.  Octobachi (It's a restaurant) has a deal on Living Social today and it's this:

"Pay $89 (regularly $200) to participate in a three-hour class on beer brewing, and you'll delve into the history of beer, enjoy presentations by local brewers, and learn about the intricate process from in-house scientist Kirkman Lindsay Amos. You'll also taste up to 16 different brews, including a Pilsner, porter, pale ale, and brown ale. Held every Sunday afternoon from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., this exciting offering also includes a brewing kit, so you can start making your own suds at home. When you sip your homemade cold one, you'll discover the solution to the boring beer that used to ale you."

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Adventures in Homebrewing-Award Winning Saison #2!


On Sunday, the father in law (aka Assistant Brewmaster) and I brewed up our award winning Saison recipe.  If you read this post, then you know that we won a 1st Place Ribbon in the Saison Category at the "Summer Suds In Savannah" Homebrew Competition. It was the first time I/we ever entered a homebrewing competition, so it was pretty sweet when we ended up placing first!   We have been waiting almost a year to try and duplicate the recipe.  So here we go!

Monday, January 30, 2012

Adventures in Homebrewing-Oaked Bourbon Stout #3

One of my favorite beers that I've brewed is an Oaked Bourbon Stout.  I have brewed it twice prior, but have decided to brew it again because if it ain't broke, then I ain't gonna fix it.

Here's the recipe:

Malts
12 lbs 2 Row
14 oz Black Malt
9 oz Roasted Barley
4 oz De-husked Carafa
4 oz Caramel 120

Hops
2 oz Williamette 60 mins
1 oz Cascade 15 mins
.50 oz Cascade/Centennial mixed 5 mins
.50 oz Cascade/Centennial mixed 1 min

Yeast
Wyeast Northwestern Ale (Did a yeast starter)

Misc.
Irish Moss 15 min

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-My First Beer Award!



On September 1st and 2nd, The Summer Suds In Savannah Homebrew Competition was held in Savannah, Georgia.  I heard about it through my membership with the Low Country Libations Homebrewing Club (Charleston's local homebrewing club).  This event was held during the Savannah Craft Brew Fest.  The homebrew competition was a BJCP sanctioned competition open to all homebrewers.   Since I had a kick @$$ homebrewed Saison that I was pretty proud of, I decided to enter it in the competition.  This was my first time ever entering a homebrewing contest.  I hate being judged!!  I think it stems from all those last place finishes I experienced as a child in the various beauty pageants my parents entered me in.  That was a joke!  Anyway, I gave it a go and ended up winning 1st Place in the Saison category.  I hope this is just the start of many more beer related accolades in the future.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

UPDATE-Adventures in Homebrewing-Pumpkin Ale (Batch 1)!


UPDATE
Transferred Pumpkin Ale Batch #1 after 2 weeks in Primary.   FG came out to be 1.007.  This will give it an ABV of 7.9%.  This tasted pretty strong and has a bit of an alcohol bite to it.  Hopefully it will mellow out in the secondary.  

 Experimented a bit by adding rum to part of this batch (in the growler)

Thinking of mixing some of Batch 1 and Batch 2 so I'll have 3 Pumpkin Beers!

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-Pumpkin Ale (Batch 2)!


On October 16th, I brewed up another batch of Pumpkin Ale (Batch #2).   This time, I had my Assistant Brewmaster (my father in law) to help me.  My beer seems to turn out better when he helps me.  I think it's because I have to multi task a lot less when he's helping me, and can really focus on the brewing (rather than the cleaning).  An extra bonus is that he is the only Assistant Brewmaster I know that will also clean your whole kitchen and vacuum your house during the brew day.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-Pumpkin Ale (Batch 1)!

This weekend, I brewed up a batch of Pumpkin Ale.  This will be an ongoing tradition every year in October.   Last year was the first year that I brewed a Pumpkin Ale.  Last year’s version was not as tasty as I would have liked it, but many of my friends seemed to like it.  Personally, I like my Pumpkin beers to be robust and bursting with flavor but I know that not everyone enjoys an Imperial high gravity beer.  Because I am still searching for the perfect pumpkin ale to serve on Thanksgiving, and the fact that I have friends who want six packs of my pumpkin ale, I have decided to brew two different batches of Pumpkin Ale this year.  By brewing 2 batches,  I will have more beer to share with friends and family, and two different beers to compare against each other.  I brewed Batch 1 this weekend.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-The Belgian IPA! (Ready to Drink)


***(See Update at the Bottom)***

Last weekend, I brewed up a batch of beer with my father in law (official title: "Assistant Brewmaster").

Here's our recipe:

Malt & Fermentables
10 lbs Rahr Two-Row
12 oz. Belgian Caramel Pils
4 oz. Briess Caramel 120L

Hops
.75 oz Chinook Pellets 60 mins
.5 oz  Chinook Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 5 mins
.25 oz  Chinook Pellets 1 min
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellet 1 min

Monday, September 12, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-The Bourbon Oaked Stout!


I am brewing this batch of Bourbon Oaked Stout to donate to The Charlotte Oktoberfest.  Anyone who donates a keg of homebrew will receive a free ticket to event.  I will also be able to pour my beer if I choose to.  It all depends on how it turns out.  If it happens to suck, I will pretend we never met.  If it's good, I will certainly be there pouring with a big smile on my face.  I brewed this on August 27th.  It was a bit windy, since this was the weekend of Hurricane Irene.  

Here's the recipe:

Malt & Fermentables
13.50 lbs 2 Row Malt
.75 lbs Black Malt
.5 lbs Roasted Barley
.25 lbs Caramel 120L
.25 lbs Dehusked Carafa III

Hops
2 oz. Williamette 60 mins
1 oz. Cascade 15 mins
1 oz. Cascade 1 min

Adventures in Homebrewing-The Belgian IPA! (Update)


***(See Update at the Bottom)***

Last weekend, I brewed up a batch of beer with my father in law (official title: "Assistant Brewmaster").

Here's our recipe:

Malt & Fermentables
10 lbs Rahr Two-Row
12 oz. Belgian Caramel Pils
4 oz. Briess Caramel 120L

Hops
.75 oz Chinook Pellets 60 mins
.5 oz  Chinook Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 5 mins
.25 oz  Chinook Pellets 1 min
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellet 1 min

Friday, August 26, 2011

Adventures in Homebrewing-The Belgian IPA! (Update)

***(See Update at the Bottom)***

Last weekend, I brewed up a batch of beer with my father in law (official title: "Assistant Brewmaster").

Here's our recipe:

Malt & Fermentables
10 lbs Rahr Two-Row
12 oz. Belgian Caramel Pils
4 oz. Briess Caramel 120L

Hops
.75 oz Chinook Pellets 60 mins
.5 oz  Chinook Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 10 mins
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets 5 mins
.25 oz  Chinook Pellets 1 min
.25 oz Falconer's Flight Pellet 1 min

Spices
A Tiny Amount of Coriander and Grains of Paradise Thrown in Last Minute of Boil

Dry Hop
.5 oz  Chinook Pellets
.5 oz Falconer's Flight Pellets

Total Bitterness 52.6 IBU

Yeast
Wyeast French Saison (3711)

Alcohol Content
6.0% ABV


Here are some pics from the brew day:

                              Heated 13.75 quarts of water to 165 degrees for the mash

                                         Getting the grains ready to put in the mash tun

                  Transferred the water from the pot to the mash tun and mixed in the grain

                      The hops divided up by when they will be added to the boiling wort

                                           We used Chinook and Falconer's Flight hops

                                Used a tiny amount of coriander and grains of paradise

While the grain was mashing for an hour at about 150 degrees, we heated up 22 quarts of water to 175 degrees for our sparge.  After the hour of mashing was up, we added the sparge water to our sparge tank and started the run off.   We ended up collecting about 6.33 gallons of wort for our boil.

The mash tun and sparge set up on my screened in patio. 

  
We collected 6.33 gallons of wort and started the boil and added hops according to our recipe

    Added Irish Moss with 15 minutes left in the boil.  This helps produce a clearer beer

                                               Close up shot of some hops we used

After an hour boil, we used a wort chiller to chill the wort down to 80 degrees

        After putting the chilled wort in our fermenter, we added our French Saison Yeast

                  Original Gravity was supposed to be 1.050, we got 1.054.  Nice and efficient!

                    Brew day is done.  The reward is a glass of our previous batch: Saison

The beer started fermenting within 24 hours, and the air lock is still bubbling away 6 days later.  It's starting to slow down though.   The fermentation temp was about 70-72 degrees the first few days, and I let it slowly creep up to mid 70's.  I will wait another week or so and then transfer the beer off the trub, and into the secondary fermenter where we will add our dry hops.  Stay tuned for an update on this batch!

***Update***
I transferred the Belgian IPA to the secondary fermenter on Thursday night.   I added 1/2 oz. each of the Chinook and Falconer's Flight Hops for the Dry Hopping.  I took a gravity reading with the hydrometer and it read 1.004.  This means the alcohol percentage of this beer will be approximately 6.7% ABV.   


Cheers!