barleywinefiend
Well-Known Member
Thanky sir. My Barrel Aged BIF target helped me put a dent in this.Holy molly... That's a sick bw stash!
Thanky sir. My Barrel Aged BIF target helped me put a dent in this.Holy molly... That's a sick bw stash!
Thanky sir. My Barrel Aged BIF target helped me put a dent in this.
they aren't my favorite type of beer, but there's still some seriously amazing bottles in that cellar.Funny, my reaction was "dear god that's a lot of beer to get rid of". Different strokes...
OT questions: What BW ages the best in your experience, and what's our favorite BW overall? Ever done a blind tasting?
I used to be really into barleywines. Have probably 24 different BA BWs in the cellar right now, most of which I've had before and am just aging a bit to see what happens. Now, I'm realizing that they all kinda end up in the same place with a few years on them - kinda one-note maltbombs that lose a lot of the bourbon or spice they have when fresh.
A little high for cellaring since I sold my coolers. I always keep the house at 68F year round in the dark. That's not exactly where I want it to be but I have to deal with it for now and make it work. I always kept my coolers at 58F.Awesome, thanks for the summary. I agree, MoAS is amazing - I have 2010-2014 in the cellar right now. One of my favs, probably because it has a roasted malt note not found in other English Barleywines I've tried (reminding me of HotD Adam).
I'd love to try some older English stuff like JW Lees or Hardy's with 10+ years on it. Have you had King Henry recently? It's fantastic, and one of my favorites right now. Also agreed on American Barleywines - prefer to have the hops fade. Still haven't gotten into my old Bruery stuff, but given the treatments and the ABV, I can see how it turns interesting.
What temperature do you keep your bottles at?
I get a big ol stiffy from mjmoser cellar. That's a sweet setup with a lot of goodness.they aren't my favorite type of beer, but there's still some seriously amazing bottles in that cellar.
Have you had King Henry recently? It's fantastic, and one of my favorites right now.
Where were you when I was living in SLO?My basement cellar as of 6ish months ago...
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Many of those bottles have since been drank, but the total # of bottles down there hasn't gotten much smaller.
(Yes, this is a California basement...)
DrinkOnly been trading / cellaring beer for less than a year. And yes I realize there are a few IPA's in the mix. I need a better method to organize, it is hard to find the stuff in the back, they go 3 to 4 rows deep.
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Moar TupperwareOnly been trading / cellaring beer for less than a year. And yes I realize there are a few IPA's in the mix. I need a better method to organize, it is hard to find the stuff in the back, they go 3 to 4 rows deep.
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Those are bottle conditioning homebrews... I am nervous about them blowing upMoar Tupperware
You waxed your homebrews?Those are bottle conditioning homebrews... I am nervous about them blowing up![]()
YupYou waxed your homebrews?![]()
Very smart! Had a frightening bomb batch that shatter-exploded a thick ass HF 2L growler (glass stuck in living room walls and ceiling) but the seal remained intactThose are bottle conditioning homebrews... I am nervous about them blowing up![]()
Although tedious I think it's a pretty good way to ensure a proper seal. For something that maybe you've worked on conditioning/blending for over a year, and/or maybe your clamper is just a piece of ****, I think it's worth it for ageable beer.You waxed your homebrews?![]()
Nice setup, I know a local brewery that trieds to use a cool-bot to control the temp in their fermentation room(four 3bbl tanks).
Question - I can't see a drain line for your condensation, does it just drip on the floor?
Nice setup, I know a local brewery that trieds to use a cool-bot to control the temp in their fermentation room(four 3bbl tanks).
Question - I can't see a drain line for your condensation, does it just drip on the floor?
There is a local brewery who uses a coolbot and a cheap AC unit to control the temperature of their cold storage room, and after seeing it setup and in action I think that is going to be the way I end up going.
That's a lot different than 370+ gallons of exothermic reaction vs a window ac unit.
I know of another local place that didn't want to spend the money on Glycol for their jacketed fermenters so they are / were running water instead...
So, total noob question here, but I'm curious why this is an issue for a brewery, actually. I've always kind of wondered about this because glycol ain't cheap. Do breweries usually run cooling for their jacketed fermenters below 32 degrees F? Obviously that's why you use glycol in engine coolant - "antifreeze" kinda covers it, but I always assumed you just dialed your fermentor coolant into whatever temperature you wanted to ferment at, which is always going to be above freezing..
The specific heat for glycol is lower than that of water, so water would actually cool more effectively, wouldn't it?
Well, now I just ******* googled it, and apparently the coolant temp is usually way below 32 F. so that answers that question. Damn, I guess big fermentations put out even more heat than I thought...