Sunday, April 27, 2014

Double Extract>Kolsch>Raspberry Wheat


I decided to brew two easy summer beers and settled on a Kolsch and the Raspberry Wheat that I made last year.  I went with extract for the time saving and knocked out both brews at the same time.  My little guy woke up at 5:23am so he got to help.  It was a really easy morning brew.
 
Kolsch

Malt
6 lbs lme German pils extract (two row Moravian pilsner malt with a touch of Vienna malt)

Hops
1.12 oz hallertau at 60
.75 oz hallertau at 5

2565 Wyeast Kolsch at 65-68 for 12-14 days, then keg condition for 3 weeks

Results
1.036 pre boil, 6.25g before malt
1.043 post boil

Water Adjustments
None


Raspberry Wheat

Malt
6 lbs lme 60% wheat 40% German two row

Hops
1.12 oz hallertau at 60
3056 Wyeast Bavarian Wheat Blend at 65-68 for 12-14 days, then keg condition for 3 weeks
4oz Williams Raspberry flavoring at kegging

Results
1.037 pre boil, 6.25g before malt
1.042 post boil

Water Adjustments
.5 Epsom
.1 chalk


Ca=36
SO4=61
Mg=17
Na=27
Cl=70
Carb=67
Hard=162
Alk=59

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Pliny!

It has been a really long time since an AG brew so I had to get some Pliny into the fermenter.  Brew day was easy, easy, easy.  I hit all my numbers and had cleanup done in 5 hours.

Grains
12.25# Pale Ale malt
10 oz c-40
10 oz carapils
1# corn sugar

Mash at 150 for 45 mins, 15 min sparge

90 min boil
3.5 oz Columbus at 90
.75 oz Columbus at 45
1 oz Simcoe at 30
2 oz Chinook at 0
1.25 oz Centennial at 0
.5 oz Simcoe at 0

1.5 oz Simcoe dry for 7 days
1.75 oz Columbus dry for 7 days
1.75 oz Centennial dry for 7 days

Target og 1072
Target fg 1011

US-05 at 68

Results
1048 pre at 7.62 without sugar
1056 pre at 7.62 with sugar

1068 post at 6.12

76.9% efficiency

Water Adjustments
2 tsp gypsum

Monday, November 18, 2013

Azacca!

I have been monitoring a new hop that was recently introduced as experimental hop #483 of the American Dwarf Hop Association.  I was eager to learn when (if) it would become available to homebrewers.  A patent was filed in May 2013 for a new hop named Azacca.  After a quick google search, I learned that Azacca is the Haitian God of Farming:


"Keep him well supplied with copious amounts of food, booze and sex and he will never desert your farm. If you own a farm think carefully about this.  He's a bit of a hillbilly, being barefooted with denim dungarees, a straw hat and pipe, and an exagerrated country drawl.  Azacca loves his grub but has simple tastes : boiled maize, bread soaked in oil and rum. And he eats like a pig, hiding away with his food and troughing the lot in double quick time. Unlike his sophisticated brother.  Azacca knows everything that's going on in the lives of the commoners and often spurts out everyone's embarrassing secrets after a skinfull of rum."

Sounds like a solid dude.


One of my online hop sites got a few pounds and I pounced on it.  I decided to mix it equally into my mosaic pale ale recipe that turned out so tasty.  Given the ease of the 15 min boil, I turned this one over to a new assistant brewer, my 3 1/2 year old son.  He rocked it out in no time, crushing the grain in the mill, the hop additions and finally pitching the yeast.  What a kid.  Unfortunately, he will be devastated when I explain to him in 6 weeks that he can't try it.
 
Grains
6 lbs Light DME
1 lb c-40 steeped to 170

15 min boil
2.5 oz split Mosaic/Azacca at 15
1 oz split Mosaic/Azacca at 5
.5 oz split Mosaic/Azacca at 0
1 oz split Mosaic/Azacca dry hop two weeks

US-05 at 66 ambient, raise to 68 for 2 weeks, then dry hop for two weeks

Results
7 pre boil at 1051 with DME added, back down the water next time
6.75 gallons post at 1053

Water Adjustments
2 tsp gypsum



Thursday, June 27, 2013

Mosaic Pale Ale

This beer is a nod to one of my favorite new beers, Two Brothers Sidekick Extra Pale Ale.  I am pretty certain the hops in that beer are Mosaic and the new experimental hop #483 from the Yakima Valley hop breeding program.  However, since I can't get my hands on the experimental hop, all Mosaic hops will have to suffice.  I brewed this batch in tandem with the all Centennial pale ale.

Grains
3 lbs Pilsen DME
3 lbs Muntons Extra Light DME
1 lb c-20 steeped to 170

15 min boil
2.5 oz Mosaic at 15
1 oz Mosaic at 5
.5 oz Mosaic at 0
1 oz Mosaic dry hop two weeks

US-05 at 66 ambient, raise to 68 for 2 weeks, then dry hop for two weeks

Results
6.25 gallons pre boil at 1052
5.9 gallons post at 1056

Water Adjustments
2 tsp gypsum

Centennial Pale Ale

With 4th of July coming up, I felt like I owed it to my country to brew a centennial pale ale, so I did.  Just like that.

Grains
3 lbs Pilsen DME
3 lbs Muntons Extra Light DME
1 lb c-40 steeped to 170

15 min boil
2.5 oz Centennial at 15
1 oz Centennial at 5
.5 oz Centennial at 0
1 oz Centennial dry hop two weeks

US-05 at 66 ambient, raise to 68 for 2 weeks, then dry hop for two weeks

Results
6 gallons pre boil at 1052
5.6 gallons post at 1056

Water Adjustments
2 tsp gypsum



"Okay guys, one more thing, this summer when you're being inundated with all this American bicentennial Fourth Of July brouhaha, don't forget what you're celebrating, and that's the fact that a bunch of slave-owning, aristocratic, white males didn't want to pay their taxes."




Sunday, June 9, 2013

Texas Blonde Ale

We recently visited Austin and had our fair share of the local Fireman's 4.  It's not going to win any awards, but it is an easy drinking summer beer.  And my wife really enjoyed it.  So I thought I would brew up a similar batch.  I made this one as a second mash with the Sour Peach Ginger Ale and I think I am just about done with the double all-grain batches.  It is too much of a pain with all of the pumps and hoses going around.  I think I will still do two brews in a session, but I will  make the first one an extract brew while the mash is recirculating on the other.  I have really liked the last two extract beers that I brewed.  My buddies Shawn and Chris helped again as I scrambled to work around the pump that stopped working and came up short on mash runnings.  I sparged some more to make it up and had to boil down some more to hit the gravity numbers.  Like I said, I think I am done with trying to pull off two all grain brews on my system.

Grains
3# Vienna
2.25 flaked maize
3# 6 row

Hops
1 oz Brewer's Gold at 60

Mash at 150

Wyeast Kolsch Ale 2565

No water adjustments

6.1g collected at 1030
4.5 post boil at 1041
64.7% efficiency
Target OG 1042

Sour Ginger Peach Ale

This recipe piqued my interest.  I have a growing affection for sour beers.  I like peach and I like ginger, so I thought I would give this one a try.  It should make a nice late summer beer.  I brewed this beer with my buddies Shawn and Chris.  Brew day was fun, but one of my pumps crapped out again so I spent a lot of time making adjustments and plumbing changes to get around the pump failure.  It was nice to have both friends lend an extra hand as I was scrambling to fix things.  I hit all of my numbers and the yeast took off nicely by the next morning.

Grains
9# 2 row
1# flaked wheat
.5# acid malt

Hops
1 oz Progress at 60 min
1/2 oz ginger root at 15 mins

Mash at 150

WL AHS Persica Ale Yeast 299

2oz peach flavoring at kegging

7g collected at 1042
5.5 g post boil at 1052
75.1% efficiency

Water adjustment: .5 epsom