grawk Posted January 1, 2010 Report Posted January 1, 2010 I've been doing a lot of reading today, so figured I'd start a thread to discuss homebrew
grawk Posted January 1, 2010 Author Report Posted January 1, 2010 BrewingTechniques Online has a lot of interesting articles. I'm going to follow some of it to start all-grain brewing soon. BT - Parti-Gyle Brewing looks particularly interesting...
naamanf Posted January 1, 2010 Report Posted January 1, 2010 I have pretty much read through How to Brew and just started Radical Brewing. I also have plans for an all grain set up. I am thinking a HERMS type with keggles and all electric heating so I can do it inside safely.
tyrion Posted January 1, 2010 Report Posted January 1, 2010 I will check out those links. I need to check the sq of my stout today. It's been about 4 days and is probably ready or very close. I need to get another cornelius keg.
naamanf Posted January 1, 2010 Report Posted January 1, 2010 I also need to stock up on some kegs. Cheapest I could find. 5 Gallon Cornelius Keg - Ball Lock
grawk Posted January 1, 2010 Author Report Posted January 1, 2010 This is what I'm going to brew next I think: Alaskan Amber Clone (5 gallons, extract with grains) OG = 1.054 FG = 1.015 Bitterness = 20 IBUs Ingredients 1 lb. two-row pale malt 1/2 lb. medium crystal malt ( 60L ) 1/2 lb. light crystal malt ( 20L ) 5 lbs. Munton's unhopped light dried malt extract (DME) (7 lbs liquid ) 4 AAU Cascade hops (1 oz. of 4% alpha acid) 4 AAU Saaz hops (1 oz. of 4% alpha acid) 1 tsp. Irish moss (last 15 minutes of the boil) German ale yeast slurry (Wyeast 1007, White Labs WLP-029 or equivalent) 7/8 cups light DME for priming Step by Step Crush pale and crystal malts. Steep in 2.5 gallons water at 150
luvdunhill Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 I haven't brewed in a while, but have done it on and off again. I've vowed however to front the cash for a conical fermenter next go around.
naamanf Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 I haven't brewed in a while, but have done it on and off again. I've vowed however to front the cash for a conical fermenter next go around. The price for the commercial conical fermenters just doesn't seem worth it. For the price glass carboy seems to be the ticket. I think I am going to order up the stuff for a bourbon aged imperial stout this weekend.
grawk Posted January 2, 2010 Author Report Posted January 2, 2010 (edited) I'm looking into a real brew kettle right now, and I'd love to build a setup where I used CO2 to move everything along and never exposed anything to the air I also ordered some birch syrup, given that that's what life&limb used for bottle conditioning Edited January 2, 2010 by grawk
luvdunhill Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 The price for the commercial conical fermenters just doesn't seem worth it. For the price glass carboy seems to be the ticket For me, the advantage isn't financial, obviously. The advantages in using it for both both primary and secondary fermentation is well worth the expense.
morphsci Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 For me, the advantage isn't financial, obviously. The advantages in using it for both both primary and secondary fermentation is well worth the expense. Word. When we were heavily into brewing this was the best purchase we made, bar none. The quality of our brews was much less variable because there were many fewer bad batches.
naamanf Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 I'm looking into a real brew kettle right now, and I'd love to build a setup where I used CO2 to move everything along and never exposed anything to the air I also ordered some birch syrup, given that that's what life&limb used for bottle conditioning I plan on doing the keg conversion. Not that much work and it's a lot cheaper than a purpose built kettle. If you are using glass carboys they make double tube caps. Carboy cap- 3, 5 & 6 Gallon Carboys :: Midwest Supplies Homebrewing and Winemaking Supplies Racking cane in one and CO2 in the other. For me, the advantage isn't financial, obviously. The advantages in using it for both both primary and secondary fermentation is well worth the expense. I can see the advantage and once I get everything else done and set up I could see getting one.
tyrion Posted January 2, 2010 Report Posted January 2, 2010 I'm going to wait for you guys to have you set ups finished and copy what you guys end up with. Although, I'm having a good time just doing it the way I have been, which has been fairly simple and produced good beer.
tyrion Posted January 3, 2010 Report Posted January 3, 2010 The stout is in the keg. I am thinking of adding 6 to 8 oz. of Sumatran cold brewed coffee. I also have some light oak chips that I am considering adding in a grain sock. I think I would boil it first so some of the stronger flavors of the oak leeches off.
guzziguy Posted January 3, 2010 Report Posted January 3, 2010 When do you put in the bacon? I think some BBQ sauce would be good too.
tyrion Posted January 3, 2010 Report Posted January 3, 2010 Coffee Bacon Stout, interesting idea. I have some good turkey bacon in the fridge.
grawk Posted January 13, 2010 Author Report Posted January 13, 2010 I'm brewing the chocolate double stout again tonight. They were low on liquid malt extract so it's 7 lbs of amber extract, 2 lbs of dried amber extract, and 2 lbs of a stout grain mix from the lhbs. 2 oz centenial and 1 oz of fuggles for the 60 minute boil, another oz of fuggles for the final 15. I'll oak it when it goes in the keg.
tyrion Posted January 13, 2010 Report Posted January 13, 2010 Nice. I'm pretty happy with the way my stout turned out. The carbonation settled down nicely and it taste good. I'm hoping to hit my homebrew shop this week to buy another corny keg and some stuff for another recipe, not sure yet. I was thinking a pliny clone but the amount of hops necessary is out of control.
naamanf Posted January 13, 2010 Report Posted January 13, 2010 I did a stout yesterday with 11lbs of pale extract, 1 lbs light DME, 3lbs grain mix, and 2 oz Warrior hops (15% AA). I also did a starter a couple days prior which gave me about a cup of yeast. OG was 1.92. Started fermenting in about an hour and I ended up loosing 3/4 a gallon to blow off. Once it's done going to secondary with oak soaked in PVW lot B.
Dusty Chalk Posted January 13, 2010 Report Posted January 13, 2010 Did you guys read that in the review of ...uh...some beer...Rogue Santa Reserve?...Life & Limb?...that Hops everywhere are low this year? Any truth to that at all? Is that affecting you guys at all? Sorry, not finding the reference, but basically the guy started out by saying he was expecting something maltier because of the problem, but it ended up not being.
grawk Posted January 13, 2010 Author Report Posted January 13, 2010 hops is definitely more expensive because of a shortage
grawk Posted January 13, 2010 Author Report Posted January 13, 2010 Installed [url=http://schmidling.com/empp.htm]JSP EasyMasher
naamanf Posted January 13, 2010 Report Posted January 13, 2010 Installed [url=http://schmidling.com/empp.htm]JSP EasyMasher
tyrion Posted January 13, 2010 Report Posted January 13, 2010 Not surprisingly, I am losing the technology battle.
grawk Posted January 13, 2010 Author Report Posted January 13, 2010 I'm looking into building a mixmasher, right now, too. There's a big gap between "too small" and "too big" in terms of motors...I'm thinking of just going to harbor freight, buying a cheap drill, and using that.
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