Finally brewed my batch yesterday, it smelled and looked amazing. I didn't actually taste it yet haha. I learned something very important yesterday, though, that I hadn't even previously considered.
When the time came to pitch the yeast, my friend wanted to do it. He started slowly opening the vial of Edinburgh, and it let out a little "hiss." I didn't think or expect it to be pressurized/carbonated, so I told him to just open it. About 3/4 of the yeast sprayed/spilled out of the vial. I pitched the rest, probably less than 1/4 of the vial. I didn't feel very good about it, though, so I added a spare packed of Safale S-04 (English) to the wort...
Note to self: OPEN YEAST VIALS SLOWLY hahaha.... lesson learned. I'm sure the beer will still turn out good, since fortunately I had an English ale yeast handy. I'll just have to brew it again soon using WLP028 and open it carefullyThat way I can see what flavors that yeast gives the beer.
Okay so due to me being busy (See haveing 2 kids) and letting my pipeline run dry I had to keg this beer at 2 weeks to make more room in my fermentation chamber. Its condition in the keg right now and tomorrow will be 3 weeks. Sooooo, just to make sure it was conditioning okay I had to pull a pint (Ended up being 2) last night and WOW this is one of the best porters I have made to date! The vanilla and peat malt go together like peanut butter and jelly. Really smooth and a head (really small amount due to it not being fully carbed) that lasted till the bottom of the pint.
GOOD JOB Humann Brewing, and thank you for posting this. This will now be my house porter. Next time I brew this I am going to add a hint more of Peat and add the Vanilla extract a few days before I keg. This time I added it when I kegged.
If your a Porter fan like me, I highly recommend brewing this.
**EDIT** No more peat, this Porter is perfect. I had some wild temp changes too before I finished my fermentation chamber, but it still came out outstanding.
After two weeks in primary, mine has now been in secondary for two weeks. Going to check on it today and decide whether to keg or continue to condition. When I racked it over to the secondary, it had a great taste to it, so I'm excited about it. Going to skip the vanilla in this batch, my wife isn't a fan of vanilla porters.
Anyone try barrel aging this? There's a vendor selling used barrels in the showcase, and I've been contemplating picking one up.
2 weeks in bottle with about 1/3 cup dextrose to prime...
The vanilla has substantially faded into complexity, the subtle smoke flavor compliments the chocolate very nicely. I chose Cherrywood malt, maybe I'll try Alderwood next time, peat the time after that, then all three! muahahaha
For sitting at about 3.5% abv, this one has a delicious body with some great character. And actually, the low carbonation is a nice compliment to it! I really can't wait to see how it turns out as it continues to condition. I most certainly will be brewing this again.
Great job Humann!![]()
Gonna be brewing this again this weekend. This keg was finished in 10 days.
Thanks!
wow, 10 days huh? any help or was that all you?![]()
So im lookin at brewin up a nice porter, and the only thing holding me back at all from this recipe is the mash schedule. I have a cooler mash tan, and have been toying with the idea of just doing the mash schedule with decoction, rather than tryin to add water in intervals. Any thoughts on this?
I looked into it a bit more and it seems the cooler tun can work pretty effeciently for decoction. I kinda got pumped for the challenge, so i might try ahead with that. Was there really no noticable difference between the step mashed batch vs the single infusion though?
hmm, well i might still try it just for the experienc and whatnot. What do you think about the head retention? would i even need to bother adding anything extra?
yeah, i love the head retention that comes with torrified wheat. i was just thinking the flaked barley would fit the profile a little more, if there was even enough of a percent to add to flavor. thanks for all the input, and the recipe!
yeah, the real stars of this show is the peat, chocolate and the Edinburgh yeast. If you have those in there, you should be good.
Looks like im gonna be brewing another batch of this again this weekend. Blew my keg on Saturday night.