• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

American Pale Ale Bee Cave Brewery Haus Pale Ale

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Brewed an extract version of this 2 weeks ago with the following hop schedule, turned out fantastic, my best beer to date.

I used

1 oz 11.4% Chinook at 60
1 oz 5.4% Cascade at 15
1 oz 5.4% Cascade at flameout

used S-05
 
FWIW....

I brewed 5 gallons on Halloween. Bottled on the seventh. Drank two last night (day 10). Fully carbed. Excellent head. With retention. Nice lacing on the glass. Clear enough to read newsprint through. Carb was in solution....remained in solution to the bottom of the glass. Very tasty. Didn't taste "green" at all. Tasted like a finished product. The only thing was my LHBS on had hops with a stronger alpha acid rating than Ed's recipe, so it was a tad more bitter than usual.

Everytime I brew this. I experiment to see how fast it takes from grain to glass. I've done the 3 weeks primary/3 weeks bottle condition. Then two weeks primary 1 week bottle. 1 week primary, 1 week bottle. Now 1 week primary 72 hours bottle condition. Still tastes as good, if not better than the others.

I left one bottle out on the counter to use a clearing gauge. It was probably "drinkable" at the 48 hour mark, but it appeared to be fairly clear. Last night was the 72 hour mark, and it appeared clear when I got home from work. So I randomly selected one from the case, and poured it warm. Very tasty indeed. I selected another, put it in the fridge in a special "beverage chilling" compartment. A few hours later I popped it open, and was met with the same results. If not better because of it being chilled.

Bottling procedures:

3/4 cup dextrose boiled in 2 cups water.
Ambient temp 77 degrees.
 
Heres an update on mine. It's been in the primary for 7 days now and is down to 1.011. The taste is great, but is still a little green since I added some additional EK Goldings at flame out. I'm really liking this beer and it should be a crowd pleaser on thanksgiving.

I'm planning on leaving it in the primary for 1 more week then kegging. I'll post some pics in a couple of weeks.

Thanks for the great recipe,
J
 
EdWort,

This is my first AG batch, second batch ever. I think I am on the money as far as recipe performance is concerned. My OG was 1.051 at pitch (Safale -05) and at day 4 I am at 1.011. I was a bit concerned that nothing was happening since for some reason I never saw any air lock activity. So I cracked the lid and took a reading dip with a well sanitized turkey baster to see what was going on.

Measurement shows that the yeasties have done/are doing their work. As this is my second batch, the rip cord on my bucket fermenter lid has been removed. The bucket seems firmly sealed nonetheless. Do you think that I missed the airlock show (bubbles) because the yeast is that fast, or because the CO2 is simply passed the seal of the lid. By "rip cord", I mean the peel strip on the edge of the bucket lid. Should I have not removed that?

All seems to be on schedule though for a great ale. Thanks for posting such a simple recipe. BTW, I am looking for a creamy stout recipe with a grain bill that will work in my cylindrical 5 Gal mash tun.

Any ideas either are welcome!
 
I will do that thanks.

I was actually thinking about possibly lowering the hops a little bit. I have not tasted this beer but some of the feedback makes me think its a little on the hoppy side. Don't be me wrong, I love IPA and hoppy beers, but I am actually gonna be showing a few people how to brew beer, giving them some and the guys letting me use his turkey fryer is a BMC guy.


Its not hoppy, and if your friend is a BMC guy then this is a great opportunity to show him what he is missing...
 
EdWort,

This is my first AG batch, second batch ever. I think I am on the money as far as recipe performance is concerned. My OG was 1.051 at pitch (Safale -05) and at day 4 I am at 1.011. I was a bit concerned that nothing was happening since for some reason I never saw any air lock activity. So I cracked the lid and took a reading dip with a well sanitized turkey baster to see what was going on.

Measurement shows that the yeasties have done/are doing their work. As this is my second batch, the rip cord on my bucket fermenter lid has been removed. The bucket seems firmly sealed nonetheless. Do you think that I missed the airlock show (bubbles) because the yeast is that fast, or because the CO2 is simply passed the seal of the lid. By "rip cord", I mean the peel strip on the edge of the bucket lid. Should I have not removed that?

All seems to be on schedule though for a great ale. Thanks for posting such a simple recipe. BTW, I am looking for a creamy stout recipe with a grain bill that will work in my cylindrical 5 Gal mash tun.

Any ideas either are welcome!

Ed's got a great porter recipe that I've made a few times. I actually have a batch of it kegged right now and another five gallons I'm giving away for Christmas presents. It's really kinda a mix between a stout and a porter in my opinion. Worth a brew nonetheless.

Hey, I've brewed bunches of AG's and I didn't even hit my numbers on my last brew.

Good job,
J
 
I will do that thanks.

I was actually thinking about possibly lowering the hops a little bit. I have not tasted this beer but some of the feedback makes me think its a little on the hoppy side. Don't be me wrong, I love IPA and hoppy beers, but I am actually gonna be showing a few people how to brew beer, giving them some and the guys letting me use his turkey fryer is a BMC guy.

If you look a lot of guys are brewing a slightly (or sometimes heavily) modified version of the original recipe. The one I brewed was almost exactly BM's original recipe. I had a slightly different AA level in my hops and adjusted accordingly to get the same IBUs and as close to the same flavor/aroma levels as I could.

I served the beer along side a slightly hoppier APA and everyone who liked craft beer preferred the hoppier beer and all the BMC drinkers really liked this one much more. One of the craft guys asked if this was an american lager style beer.

I would also recommend brewing with the Danstar nottingham yeast and keep it low and slow to minimize ester production, you'll end up with a very neutral ale that no one will dislike.
 
After a few extra weeks, this beer is tasting fantastic! I dry hopped with summit hop tea and cascade. Unfortunately the keg is more than half empty....
gratuitous pic:
web.jpg

You washing down your heartguard with that beer?!?!:ban::fro::mug:
 
Ed's got a great porter recipe that I've made a few times. I actually have a batch of it kegged right now and another five gallons I'm giving away for Christmas presents. It's really kinda a mix between a stout and a porter in my opinion. Worth a brew nonetheless.

Hey, I've brewed bunches of AG's and I didn't even hit my numbers on my last brew.

Good job,
J

Hey half pint, can you post a link to Ed's Porter/Stout? I could not find it.
Thanks!
 
Yeah, I ferment in the 60's with most of my ales. I usually try to stay at the low end.

I kegged mine tonight after 10 days in the primary. I didn't crash cool, but this stuff was clear enough to read through. I think I should have waited a bit longer, but oh well. I think it will be good after I pour a pint of sediment in a few days.

Tastes very bitter and delicious!
 
Brewing up 8 gallons of this tonite. Modified the grain bill slightly. Mainly just rounded the amounts up to even numbers. Should help with my OG numbers. Going to use leaf hops this time for the 60 minute additions, and a small amount for dry hopping. I have found that using UK Crystal gives it a bit richer color. I dunno why.....
 
Just bought all of the ingredients yesterday. Woohoo. Brewing this on Wednesday and showing at least 4 people how to brew. Unfortunately it's just PM but it's a start. Also splurged and bought at wort chiller.
 
Just bought all of the ingredients yesterday. Woohoo. Brewing this on Wednesday and showing at least 4 people how to brew. Unfortunately it's just PM but it's a start. Also splurged and bought at wort chiller.

I see your in Houston. Where did you get your ingredients from?
 
Defalco's Its on Stella Link. I just moved down here from Wisconsin, seems like a great place thus far.

Cool. Yeah, that's where I go as well. They're pretty cool and informative. It seems a lot of people homebrew in Wisconsin.
 
Just finished 5 gallons this morning ... the boil was about 90 mins, and the color is much darker than I expected ...

Did not change ingredients, except for the yeast (US-04 re-pitched from a cream ale)

I hope that the guy at Austin Homebrew made the right mixture og grains ... gravity was 1044, and the batch was closer to 5.5 - 6 gals..


Does a longer boil darken the wort ?
 
Just finished 5 gallons this morning ... the boil was about 90 mins, and the color is much darker than I expected ...

Did not change ingredients, except for the yeast (US-04 re-pitched from a cream ale)

I hope that the guy at Austin Homebrew made the right mixture og grains ... gravity was 1044, and the batch was closer to 5.5 - 6 gals..


Does a longer boil darken the wort ?

It's alright man. My og was 1.045 (I also got mine from Austin Homebrew Supply.) I just kegged it yesterday after 10 days in the primary (just like Ed said.) I checked it two days in a row and both days it was at 1.011, so I just decided to keg it.

It tastes wonderful. I didn't use a hop bag and Hops were in suspension hardcore, but I don't mind that.

The flavor is very fresh with a hit of citrus. You'll enjoy this. I can't wait till it's carbed up!
 
Alright, like I said, I kegged mine yesterday and I just did a test for carbonation since I've had it set at 30 psi for around 24 hrs now. It's pretty undercarbed, but damn! I poured a half pint to clear my 10 ft lines of old beer and then poured another half pint to test the kegged brew and HOLY CRAP! This stuff is delicious! I poured another semi-flat pint!

I'm really liking this stuff!

I only changed one thing. I added .5 oz of EKG at flame out.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top