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Beer Pudding in Austin

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Joined
Oct 2, 2007
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Hi folks, been a lurker and a reader.
Not much of a poster, ever, anywhere.

But since I signed up this week and it keeps telling me to introduce myself, I figgered I'd tell this story.

I've been brewing since '92.
For years I focused on my small meads and ciders and excluded beer. Then my better half decided I needed to brew more beer and, after a discussion about the PITA of bottling, bought me a kegging rig. She likes the drink almost as much as I do. Soon thereafter began a weekly Wednesday night ritual of partial mash brewing. Some day, when the house grows larger, I'll move to an AG rig. Until then. . .

Some of my friends were interested in learning, so a night of beer, food and brewing was started. Now, we've been going for over a year and most of the core fellas know how to make a decent batch of beer. I've created a process document for them to follow in case I am out of pocket and they are forgetting what happens next. We've created some eminently drinkable beers.

However, the last two beers we've made have gone awry in some way. We have recently started brewing again after an 8 week hiatus for the birth of my first kid. So we have only made three batches in the last three months. Maybe my friends just have really bad memories. Maybe they drink too much. Anyway, we have screwed up some beer.

Two weeks ago, while brewing, a timer went off and they pulled the wort off the fire and began cooling it without checking where we were, so we missed the aroma hops. Not a big deal. It will just be a bit less flavorful.

Last week, another brother, while reading the process doc lost all mental ability for the space of thirty seconds. We strain our wort into the primary, and this beer was light on the hops and should have taken no time at all to strain. About ten minutes into the strain, I asked, "Did you put in Irish moss?"
"Yes"
"How much?"
"All of it."
Where the doc said "Add Irish Moss" he forgot that it meant a teaspoon for a 5 gallon batch. He didn't read the package. He just dumped the whole thing, maybe about a full cups worth.
Can anyone say wort flavored laverbread?
Beer flavored pudding?
We ended up with two huge bowls of Hopped Barley Irish moss pudding. It tasted ok, not worth replicating.

"Screw it" we said and forged ahead.
It fermented. Slowly.
Last night we transferred it to a secondary to give it more chance to settle.
The siphoning was painful.
At the bottom it was so thick that it just stopped dead in the tubing. Imagine trying to eat pudding with a straw.
Now that the beer is in the secondary, I realize I should have put it into another 6.5 instead of a 5. The ferment has kicked in hard again and bubbling through pudding makes a lot of foam.

I am going to make the boys drink about half of it before I just start using it to thicken stews. I might have to film that session.

From now on, until we have a good back log of about 8 kegs, Seamus will be overseeing all steps of the brewing process!

A long introductory post, but a worthwhile story, I hope.
 
LOL, it is funny to hear other peoples stories about messed up stuff during a session or fermenting. I guess I am lucky. I dropped a glass carboy into a porcelain sink and about lost two fingers once when I was 16, and I re-textured the pantry ceiling with rhubarb wine. Other than that, I have been golden. If it ever did happen I would just forge on, so keep it up and good things will happen. It is always so funny to hear though, lol.
 
Beer Pudding! Let this be a lesson to the "more is better" crowd.

Since you keg, you can always use the aroma hops to dry hop. Isn't exactly the same, but probably better than no nose at all.
 
First of all, let me say that you married very well.

Second, I now have something to say when things go awry on brewing day: "At least it's not beer pudding!" ("Can anyone say wort flavored laverbread?" Classic! :rockin:)

Finally, welcome!


TL
 
I figgered I would update on the pudding beer.
I have yet to force the boys into a pudding session.
Hard to do when good stuff abounds.

However, we now have a beer with a great malty flavor, a subtle hoppiness, and the consistency of commercial grade chocolate milk (you know, the kind thickened with carrageenan).
It is not easy to drink.
I might have to start using it as a breakfast supplement.
 
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