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American Pale Ale *3/16/2011*

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TwoFortySX

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Today was a brew day, I decided upon an American Pale Ale recipe kit from my LHBS. The kits that they sell are a little less "generic" that most recipe kits. They come with liquid yeast and fresh hops! :D I was in no hurry to get this beer brewed so I took my time and documented the process with some pictures. I know that nobody can resist a little beer porn.

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My SWMBO is a graphic designer so I had her make me a quick label to use on this beer. It is simple but it gets the job done for me! If anyone is interested in having some labels made, let me know. I am sure she can do it for like 10 bucks depending on the complexity of design you want.
 
This is the recipe:

Ingredients

4lbs Alexander's Light Syrup
3lbs Amber DME
1/2lbs Crushed Briess Crystal Malt 60L
13HBU Centennial Hops (Bittering)
3/4oz Cascade Hops (Aroma)
1 1/2oz Cascade Hops (dry hop)
5oz Priming Sugar

White Labs British Ale Yeast (005)

Target O.G. 1.054-1.056
Target F.G. 1.015-1.017

My actual O.G. was a little bit over that at 1.058 so I left it at that.
 
Weighing my hops so I can divide them evenly
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ADDING THE MALT!
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No boil over for me! Its nice to have a relatively big pot for 5gal batches!
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Adding the water, aerating the wort!

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BATTER UP! PITCHING THE YEAST!
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AERATING THE YEAST AND WORT
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This is my new beer's resting place, next to my Vanilla Coffee porter that is about 6 weeks old and ready to be bottled as soon as I get my ass in gear!

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Well done. That was a buttload of pix.

Thank You! I really enjoy documenting the things I do with pictures. I use to always do write ups when I would do motor swaps, suspension work, etc to my cars over the years. Its cool that even years and years later those write ups are still on the internet forums that I posted them on. So I guess documenting my brewing is a way to leave a little bit myself on this forum!

As I progress I will continue to do these types of write ups especially when I start learning to do more complex brewing!

Thanks Again,
Jimmy:mug:
 
Very nice! I just finished up my first IPA kit and it looks very similar in color to your brew. Luckily this time (by 2nd brew) I used a blow off tube on my primary because the 3rd day I cam in and there were trace amounts of beer in the tube. Im guessing if I had used my air lock it would have made it out and onto the bucket/floor.
 
Nice!! Great documentation, and it looks like you are very organized for your brew days. That's always a huge plus. Hope it comes out great, man!
 
Thanks! I appreciate the compliments. I tend to be pretty organized with my brew days and always have a plan going in. I am hoping the good practices now will help me when I start creating my own recipes then moving to all grain.

* I will add the gravity readings, the bottling process and then a taste score sheet to this thread! :D
 
Good luck with that yeast. I have used it twice and with extremely tight temperature controls both times there was banana esters coming through. The batch I am working with now has slight banana esters and that is even controlling the fermentation temp in a chamber. Initial wort needs to be chilled to ferm temps (62-64'f) before pitching. I pitched at ~72'f and am having banana esters.
 
This is the first time that I will be using this yeast so I do not have much of an opinion formed. The reviews I read on White Labs website were all favorable. The guys at my LHBS did not have too much to say about it. I will be fermenting at the upper level of its temperature range, 68-70 degrees.

Thank you for mentioning your experience with this yeast. I will watch my temperature and make sure to comment specifically on the flavors of the beer when it is finished.

WLP005 British Ale Yeast
This yeast is a little more attenuative than WLP002. Like most English strains, this yeast produces malty beers. Excellent for all English style ales i
Including bitter, pale ale, porter, and brown ale.


Attenuation: 67-74%
Flocculation: High
Optimum fermentation temperature: 65-70°F
Alcohol Tolerance: Medium
 
This is the first time that I will be using this yeast so I do not have much of an opinion formed. The reviews I read on White Labs website were all favorable. The guys at my LHBS did not have too much to say about it. I will be fermenting at the upper level of its temperature range, 68-70 degrees.

Thank you for mentioning your experience with this yeast. I will watch my temperature and make sure to comment specifically on the flavors of the beer when it is finished.

WLP005 British Ale Yeast
This yeast is a little more attenuative than WLP002. Like most English strains, this yeast produces malty beers. Excellent for all English style ales i
Including bitter, pale ale, porter, and brown ale.


Attenuation: 67-74%
Flocculation: High
Optimum fermentation temperature: 65-70°F
Alcohol Tolerance: Medium

FWIW this batch was pitched at ~72'f and kept at a constant 62'f from there on out. Everyone that I have talked to said that the initial pitching temp was way to high. What temp did you pitch this? The last batch was pitched at 74'f and it was fermented between 70-72'f and it was undrinkable. Hopefully YMMV
 
What temp did you pitch this?

I pitched at around 75 degrees, and like I said previously, my spare room where I ferment keeps whatever I am fermenting at about 68 degrees. I am not doubting your experience at all and I respect your opinion but I am not one to worry. I am very far from a perfectionist, and pretty laid back when it comes to most things. As long as the beer is relatively drinkable then I am pretty okay.

I did read that someone ended up with some off flavors from this yeast and emailed White Labs. White Labs responded with this:
"It could be a lot of things, including contamination. But if it is just
with WLP005, perhaps it is fusel alcohols. The British Ale yeast produces
more then other strains, so this may be coming through in the beer. Lower
fermentation temperatures reduce fusel alcohols. Hope this helps and if you
have any other questions don't hesitate to write."

We will see where this batch goes. If it ends up having some off flavors and being barely drinkable, I will take some bottles to my LHBS and do a little talking.:mug:
 
I pitched at around 75 degrees, and like I said previously, my spare room where I ferment keeps whatever I am fermenting at about 68 degrees. I am not doubting your experience at all and I respect your opinion but I am not one to worry. I am very far from a perfectionist, and pretty laid back when it comes to most things. As long as the beer is relatively drinkable then I am pretty okay.

I did read that someone ended up with some off flavors from this yeast and emailed White Labs. White Labs responded with this:


We will see where this batch goes. If it ends up having some off flavors and being barely drinkable, I will take some bottles to my LHBS and do a little talking.:mug:

I wish you nothing but the best with this.... please remember that 68'f is your AMBIENT room temp and will not be the temp of the beer. During fermentation it can be up to a max of 10'F higher which would put you way out of the range of that yeast. Do keep us posted!! :mug:
 
I wish you nothing but the best with this.... please remember that 68'f is your AMBIENT room temp and will not be the temp of the beer. During fermentation it can be up to a max of 10'F higher which would put you way out of the range of that yeast. Do keep us posted!! :mug:

Thank you.

I do realize that the ambient room temperature is not the temperature of the liquid within my primary especially during fermentation. All of my fermenters have LCD strip thermometers on them so I can monitor the temperatures. I usually take temperature readings when I pull a sample to test gravity. The LCD strips are normally accurate so I am okay with using them to monitor temperature.

I will keep this thread updated :D
 
I like the white board...I keep things in a bound journal but the last two batch at a time (one on the outdoor burner and one inside on the stove) with buddies (over while drinking) was a mess!!!!

Large, clear, easy to read...and I could transcribe to the bound book later. Excellent idea!
 
I like the white board...I keep things in a bound journal but the last two batch at a time (one on the outdoor burner and one inside on the stove) with buddies (over while drinking) was a mess!!!!

Large, clear, easy to read...and I could transcribe to the bound book later. Excellent idea!

I have a 5 subject notebook that I keep my batches in too! I transfer the recipes and specifics over. I always hand write a dated taste test for each occasion that I drink a beer that I brew. :mug:
 
FoundersBrew said:
Did you guys make a starter for this yeast? If not you may have put too much strain on it.

I didn't make a starter. If I end up with some off flavors and a not so good tasting beer, then I will know better next I use this yeast.
 
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