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epistrummer

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Apr 28, 2012
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I just went out of my way today to find my first barleywine after reading some posts about it, and all I can say is "WOW"! I've got to brew some of this! I don't care that I have to wait a year or more for it to mature, I'm loving it. So, does anyone have any recommendations as to which recipe to try?
 
I just recently went through this. Most barley wine recipes lack a lot of detail I'm assuming because they take so long to brew. I believe revvy came up with a very interesting recipe for a special occasion. If I stumble a cross it I will will link it.
 
Which barley wine did you try? That may help steer you to particular recipes. There's a big difference between English and American barley wines.
 
I'm a huge fan of the barleywine in my sig. I think the recipe turned out great, and I plan to brew it again this Christmas.

Christmas 2013, I have plans for a pecan barleywine, as soon as my chunks of toasted pecan wood have done their thing in the rye whiskey they're in now.
 
Google gravity bomb barleywine, its in extract form but I'm sure you can convert it using beer smith or something. I have it in secondary now for 3 weeks with oak cubes and then bottling. Tasted it when i transferred from primary and it tasted awesome already minus the heavy booze kick on the end but that will mellow with time of course.
 
Which barley wine did you try? That may help steer you to particular recipes. There's a big difference between English and American barley wines.

It was Old Foghorn by Anchor Brewing Co in San Francisco. Just a flavorful, pleasant brew. I only bought one bottle because it sells for about $16 per 6 pack, but they let you buy singles where I go. So anyway, it is an American barley wine.
 
Google gravity bomb barleywine, its in extract form but I'm sure you can convert it using beer smith or something. I have it in secondary now for 3 weeks with oak cubes and then bottling. Tasted it when i transferred from primary and it tasted awesome already minus the heavy booze kick on the end but that will mellow with time of course.

I googled that and found an all grain version. the recipe says to wait 3 weeks after bottling before drinking. I was under the impression that barleywine takes a lot longer than that to age. Should I wait 6 weeks? 6 months?
 
When you Google it all grain pops up first and extract version is second link, at least when i checked a moment ago, I know barleywine takes time usually so i was going to bottle and let it sit for quite a few months anyway but since it already tasted decent out of the primary i will for sure give a try after 3 weeks in the bottle. I also scaled the recipe down to a 3 gal tester batch.
 
I think you're going to want to wait more than 3 weeks. I brewed one in march that has been in secondary now for a few months, I plan to bottle in a couple weeks and then I'm going to wait until January 6th (my 40th birthday) to open one.

Barleywines typically need a few months, at least, and will continue to improve for years.
 
I typically let my barleywine age a minimum of six months before moving to keg or bottle.
 
I guess ill have that 3 gallon carboy tied up for quite a while then.....Time to buy another one, and I just dropped another $100 on midwest this morning...hopefully the lady friend doesn't see the packages, she just notices the middle bedroom or "brewery" gets a little more cluttered each week and makes comments :)
 
I guess ill have that 3 gallon carboy tied up for quite a while then.....Time to buy another one, and I just dropped another $100 on midwest this morning...hopefully the lady friend doesn't see the packages, she just notices the middle bedroom or "brewery" gets a little more cluttered each week and makes comments :)

Mine gave up on comments for the most part - though I did move a bunch of my homebrew stuff to my friend's place. Most of the comments now are about beer I'm cellaring.
 
It was Old Foghorn by Anchor Brewing Co in San Francisco. Just a flavorful, pleasant brew. I only bought one bottle because it sells for about $16 per 6 pack, but they let you buy singles where I go. So anyway, it is an American barley wine.

It's made by an American brewery, but it's an English-style barleywine. That means it's malt focused and on the sweet side. American-style barleywines tend to be very hop oriented and can be as bitter as some big Imperial IPAs.
 
hopefully the lady friend doesn't see the packages, she just notices the middle bedroom or "brewery" gets a little more cluttered each week and makes comments :)

My wife used to do that too with my home audio/theater obsession. It was a fun talk when the pro-audio amps and 15" subs showed up. After that debacle, she doesn't care about what I do with beer brewing.:rockin:
 
yeah she actually came into the brewery (middle bedroom) yesterday and sat there and spit balled ideas with me for like 20 mins, i wash shocked, shes come around haha, we even discussed shelving ideas and equipment, reeeeelllling her in!
 
My first Barleywine was the extract kit from Northern Brewer with specialty grains. I did a 2L starter with WLP001 as well as the secondary in a carboy for 6 months before bottling. It came out close to a Sierra Nevada BigFoot taste wise. It's one of those beers that will put you to sleep for sure. With over a case left I'm savoring everyone of them.
 
I'm going to make one soon but it will have to be a 2 1/2 gal batch because my all grain kit can't handle 17-20 lb grain bills. I did a 10 lb grain bill with it and it was full enough.
 

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