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12 Beers of Christmas - 2023 Edition

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Let the lagering begin. View attachment 823636
shetc,
This picture was so helpful. I have been experimenting with some no-oxygen transfers and I really didnt want to connect my CO2 bottle to the top of my fermenter because I can never get the pressure low enough on the regulator. But, I Just looked at how you connect the top of the keg with the top of the fermenter with two grey (gas) connectors. Sometimes, the simplest answers are the most brilliant. Thanks!
 
shetc,
This picture was so helpful. I have been experimenting with some no-oxygen transfers and I really didnt want to connect my CO2 bottle to the top of my fermenter because I can never get the pressure low enough on the regulator. But, I Just looked at how you connect the top of the keg with the top of the fermenter with two grey (gas) connectors. Sometimes, the simplest answers are the most brilliant. Thanks!
Before you do that, ideally you fill the keg with sanitizer (e.g., starsan solution), then push that sanitizer out with co2. That ensures a) they keg is sanitized, and b) it's full of 100% CO2 before you begin the transfer from the fermentor.
 
you can do 4 at a time lol. Fill the first keg with sanitizer, connect the rest in serial, let it rip. Eventually, the last one will blow the sanitizer. When the last one is done blowing liquid, remove everything. Booom - four sanitized kegs full of CO2.

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I, too, decided to try an early sample of the Juniper Rye Bock. Kinda on the sweet side, which I assume is due to the amount of crystal malt. Rye and juniper are not overwhelming but not fully integrated yet - I hope lagering helps with that issue.
20230714_143058.jpg
 
Good morning all. Brewed my entry for the 2023 12 Beers of Christmas this weekend (the Spiced Dunkle Weizenbock). Decided to go all in on the "Christmas in July" theme for the brewery. It was all Christmas all the time in the third bay.

Pulled out a few of my favorite Christmas LPs to provide the atmospherics. Made for a delightful brew day and attracted a few curious neighbors as an added bonus. Good times.

Brew day went swimmingly. Hit the recipe right in the numbers and the spices at the end of the boil had the whole garage smelling like elf farts (in a good way).

Speaking of elf farts, I've been burned one too many times by spice additions in the boil, so I dialed back Randy's recommendations a bit. Hydrometer sample proved that the wort is still plenty spicy (with the caraway seeds surprisingly in the lead). Plan on having a tincture on hand at kegging to adjust to taste using the tried and true three sample/average out/scale up model of flavor additions.

Since this is a bigger beer I did a step starter for the Belgian Abbey II yeast (WY1762) so I had a nice slurry of healthy yeast. I must have been a good boy this year because the fermentation took off like a shot. Within the first 12 hours I had to switch from an airlock to a blow-off tube on my fermenter. First time I've ever had a 6g batch max out my 30L Speidel and it's still bubbling away frantically on day three - epic.

All in all an excellent brew day. Very interested to see how this beer turns out and equally excited to share it with the group.

 
Good morning all. Brewed my entry for the 2023 12 Beers of Christmas this weekend (the Spiced Dunkle Weizenbock). Decided to go all in on the "Christmas in July" theme for the brewery. It was all Christmas all the time in the third bay.

Pulled out a few of my favorite Christmas LPs to provide the atmospherics. Made for a delightful brew day and attracted a few curious neighbors as an added bonus. Good times.

Brew day went swimmingly. Hit the recipe right in the numbers and the spices at the end of the boil had the whole garage smelling like elf farts (in a good way).

Speaking of elf farts, I've been burned one too many times by spice additions in the boil, so I dialed back Randy's recommendations a bit. Hydrometer sample proved that the wort is still plenty spicy (with the caraway seeds surprisingly in the lead). Plan on having a tincture on hand at kegging to adjust to taste using the tried and true three sample/average out/scale up model of flavor additions.

Since this is a bigger beer I did a step starter for the Belgian Abbey II yeast (WY1762) so I had a nice slurry of healthy yeast. I must have been a good boy this year because the fermentation took off like a shot. Within the first 12 hours I had to switch from an airlock to a blow-off tube on my fermenter. First time I've ever had a 6g batch max out my 30L Speidel and it's still bubbling away frantically on day three - epic.

All in all an excellent brew day. Very interested to see how this beer turns out and equally excited to share it with the group.

View attachment 824971
I got a good laugh from this message as my wife insists on watching HGTV Christmas in July 🤣
 
you can do 4 at a time lol. Fill the first keg with sanitizer, connect the rest in serial, let it rip. Eventually, the last one will blow the sanitizer. When the last one is done blowing liquid, remove everything. Booom - four sanitized kegs full of CO2.

View attachment 823745
Can you 'splain this to me, 'cause I am having a difficult time understanding how to do this.
Assuming that the 1st keg is full of sanitizer, the incoming gas will push its liquid out into the 2nd, but if that enters the 2nd keg on the gas-in post, the keg will contain only a small amount before spitting it out of the liquid out tube, and only sanitize the bottom of the bowl. If instead it enters the 2nd on its liquid post, then the second key will fill with liquid sanitizer (Good!) but will fill with the 5 gallons of the first before blowing gas. How can you get a cascade to function beyond 1 downstream keg?
 
Can you 'splain this to me, 'cause I am having a difficult time understanding how to do this.
Assuming that the 1st keg is full of sanitizer, the incoming gas will push its liquid out into the 2nd, but if that enters the 2nd keg on the gas-in post, the keg will contain only a small amount before spitting it out of the liquid out tube, and only sanitize the bottom of the bowl. If instead it enters the 2nd on its liquid post, then the second key will fill with liquid sanitizer (Good!) but will fill with the 5 gallons of the first before blowing gas. How can you get a cascade to function beyond 1 downstream keg?
hmm, I see what you're saying. Let me look into it this weekend (if I remember haha). I feel pretty certain it worked, as it took at least a minute or two before it started spitting out the last keg. It's possible I've been lying to myself, wouldn't be the first time.

Anyway, you can see the color of the disconnects there - white is gas, black is liquid. So you can see how I had them sequenced.
 
hmm, I see what you're saying. Let me look into it this weekend (if I remember haha). I feel pretty certain it worked, as it took at least a minute or two before it started spitting out the last keg. It's possible I've been lying to myself, wouldn't be the first time.

Anyway, you can see the color of the disconnects there - white is gas, black is liquid. So you can see how I had them sequenced.
It's a rarity for me to have a few idle kegs at one time, and this week I do, so I had been wondering about how to save some steps. Thanks.
 
Today was brew day for the Spiced Cherry Dubbel (aka St Barbara's Cherry Dubbel). I decreased the hops to ~22 IBU because 30 IBU seemed like it might clash with the cinnamon and cherries. I also used Styrian (Celeia) and Saaz on the late side instead of the recommend (Northern Brewer) for 60 minutes. My final gravity after adding the jaggery sugar at the end of the boil was 1.077. Beersmith predicts that the 10lbs of sweet/sour cherries will take the OG to a whopping 1.141, but I am not sure that I believe all of those cherry sugars will be fermented and I am not sure that I will ever know!

St_Barbara's_Recipe.png
 
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hmm, I see what you're saying. Let me look into it this weekend (if I remember haha). I feel pretty certain it worked, as it took at least a minute or two before it started spitting out the last keg. It's possible I've been lying to myself, wouldn't be the first time.

Anyway, you can see the color of the disconnects there - white is gas, black is liquid. So you can see how I had them sequenced.
I think it would work as long as you don't connect all the kegs at once. In other words, don't connect the third keg until the second is full of sanitizer and so on...
 
Today was brew day for the Spiced Cherry Dubbel (aka St Barbara's Cherry Dubbel). I decreased the hops to ~22 IBU because 30 IBU seemed like it might clash with the cinnamon and cherries. I also used Styrian (Celeia) and Saaz on the late side instead of the recommend (Northern Brewer) for 60 minutes. My final gravity after adding the jaggery sugar at the end of the boil was 1.077. Beersmith predicts that the 10lbs of sweet/sour cherries will take the OG to a whopping 1.141, but I am not sure that I believe all of those cherry sugars will be fermented and I am not sure that I will ever know!

View attachment 826467
10lbs of Cherries - holy cow. I have fond memories of de-pitting 1lb of cherries a few years ago for a beer. Better pack a lunch!
 
10lbs of Cherries - holy cow. I have fond memories of de-pitting 1lb of cherries a few years ago for a beer. Better pack a lunch!
This cherry pitter has good reviews. Might be worth a shot.

Limited-time deal: Ordekcity Cherry Pitter Tool Cherries Corer Pitter Tool Stainless Steel Fruit Pit Remover for Cherry Jam with Lock Design https://a.co/d/9auyeqi

I want the cherry “meat” exposed anyway. I might try the sous vide method for pasteurizing the cherries after I pit them.
 
This cherry pitter has good reviews. Might be worth a shot.

Limited-time deal: Ordekcity Cherry Pitter Tool Cherries Corer Pitter Tool Stainless Steel Fruit Pit Remover for Cherry Jam with Lock Design https://a.co/d/9auyeqi

I want the cherry “meat” exposed anyway. I might try the sous vide method for pasteurizing the cherries after I pit them.
On the last few episodes of Basic Brewing, the hosts have been experimenting with a steam juicer to produce juice for brewing. I'm not sure if it applies to your recipe but it seems like a nifty way to extract flavor from fruits and veggies. A couple of more platelet donations and I'll have enough Amazon gift cards to get one 😀
 
Just ran across this looking at "Similar threads" below. Any issues with limited experience for 2024? I like this bit of comradery and with being retired next year I would have plenty of time to practice brew one.
Welcome! Its not my project, but I got no issues with your participating this or next year. Maybe someone is close enough to you geographically that you could brew with them?
 
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