I went 100% Amaraillo Hops with mine. The transformation of the beer from a week one bottle conditioned sample to a one month sample is mind blowing.
One week in and it was all citrus and grapefruity. Almost to a fault if you weren't expecting it. Two weeks in it was perfect for a session...
I have an amarillo brew that's a bit over the top on the grapefruit / citrus taste. I was wondering if anyone had any suggested pairings that helped to cut the initial Amarillo shock?
I wash my bottles in the dishwasher whenever I'm done drinking out of them. Basically it goes:
1. Shake Rinse
2. Dishwasher (sanitize mode)
3. Store (indefinitely)
4. Sanitize (boil)
5. Bottle.
6. Drink
7. Rinse
8. Repeat
I don't think my dishwasher actually shoots water up into...
Maybe it's because I'm a Yankee, but I'm with damnyankee on this one. There's nothing wrong with how starsan cleans. People can and should use and be happy.
I, personally, am finding way too many chemicals in my life already and so I've been boiling my bottles. I've got a pretty slick...
Better late than never...
My kitchen is at the end of a hall. To contain the smell I open all of the windows in the kitchen and one window in the next room. The hot air from the rest of the house gets sucked into the kitchen and out. The window in the next room acts like the valve of fresh...
Thanks folks. I had figured that temperature variation wasn't a big deal after the yeasties had done their thing, and also if we were talking about temperature changes where both high and low ranges were below the standard Ale yeast fermentation range.
I'll stick it in the pantry tonight.
I asked about this in this beginner's brew forum but nobody seemed to know if the following is ok or not. I was about to cold crash a batch of this recipe in particular so I thought I'd ask here, too, in case one of you learned folks knew if this was going to be a bad move. :drunk:
It's...
Yes, I can confirm that primary fermentation is complete.
So the question is, does temperature fluctuation alter the taste of the beer after that? Perhaps I should put it into a secondary and THEN stick on the pantry?
I've been brewing for over a year and I have yet to cold crash a beer. I figured it was something that I'd do if I had lagering equipment to chill a beer in nice and cold in a contained environment, but I live in the city and the chances of me obtaining and utilizing such equipment is slim to...
Wow, I just noticed that, too. Get out of my mind!
Tons of airlock activity here, though. Odd that you're seeing bubbles form on the surface but nothing spewing out. Your apfelwein might be possessed.
Yeah, some yeasts call it quits after about 10% ABV. I would check your yeast before going crazy with the sugars. You might end up drinking some uber sweetened (unfermented) sugars with your still 9-10% ABV apfelwein. I'm not sure it would taste very good.