I just ordered some verdant and some mo and I have a best bitter up next. Thanks for the recommendations
I'd recommend something simple first. 5% medium-dark British crystal, rest mo. Single infusion mash at 65c, simple is king. Medium to low carbonation.I just ordered some verdant and some mo and I have a best bitter up next. Thanks for the recommendations
I just use acid malt because its so much easier for me. I’m brewing 3 gallon batches and I’m usually only including 1.5 - 2.5 oz. So a pound even lasts awhile. I don’t have cylinders marked in ccs to measure. I also don’t like the idea of storing a bottle of strong acid and wearing rubber gloves to handle it. Had great results since I started using it.Whilst dry yeasts have got a lot better, British strains are one area where they still generally lag behind what's available elsewhere. Verdant seems to be a significant step up on the others, although Notty and S-04 do get used by a lot of small breweries here.
Acid malt only exists to let our friends with Mutti issues contort themselves with acid additions that comply with the Reinheitsgebot - British brewers ignore such nonsense and use AMS/CRS (a HCl/H2SO4 blend) as God intended. A bit of CRS is completely normal - see these articles from one of the main providers of technical services to British brewers :
https://www.murphyandson.co.uk/technical_article_category/ph-values/
Same for me. Adding 1-2% of the grist as acidulated malt is so convenient, and it just does the job.I just use acid malt because its so much easier for me. I’m brewing 3 gallon batches and I’m usually only including 1.5 - 2.5 oz. So a pound even lasts awhile. I don’t have cylinders marked in ccs to measure. I also don’t like the idea of storing a bottle of strong acid and wearing rubber gloves to handle it. Had great results since I started using it.
Has anyone here brewed this JW Lees Mild?
https://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2010/07/lets-brew-wednesday-1952-lees-best-mild.html?m=1
White Labs has a couple strains I would love to get out of their vault. WLP025 Southwold Ale Yeast and WLP026 Premium Bitter Yeast. I’ve been trying to get either of these for 2 years.I have to try Verdant. I've got too many yeasties in the bank and trying to winnow down the herd.
I love Notty. It's prolly my "if you could only have one yeast forever yeast." Has a wide temperature range, flocculates well, clean, makes a good cyser, easy to work with, etc.
FYI, anyone that wants to try the vault strain WLP022 Essex Ale yeast, then ping White Labs. It's in production and some is still in stock. I signed up for two vials 6 or 9 months ago as my local HBS dude loves this yeast. Now, go figure, a homebrewtalk member cleaning out his yeast bank gifted me Essex ale and Manchester yeast slants. I recultured the Essex pretty much the day I figured out that White Labs had gone into production. Anyhoo, White Labs takes a vault strain into production when there are ~200 orders, but white labs actually makes more than 200 so whenever a vault strain is in production, there should be an opportunity to order.
Can I ask if the 1.75 hour boil time is correct ?I’ve brewed it a few times with great results, but I’ve used homemade invert and used Sinamar in lieu of caramel on a couple occasions (other times I’ve just skipped the coloring.
As for cubitainers, I treat them like growlers— best consumed in one evening but definitely within 24 hours.
London III isn't the "true" Boddington yeast. I'm hoping WLP038 gets me there.
Can I ask if the 1.75 hour boil time is correct ?
As for cubitainers, I treat them like growlers— best consumed in one evening but definitely within 24 hours.
I agree with this. I've also had a heck of a time getting the proper carbonation level in them because they are a bit stretchy and fiddly with the fill level. I have more or less given up on them to be honest because I don't tend to drink a gallon of beer in a sitting, and (while its not REAL ale) I can live with the compromise of force carbonated bitter for the convenience and shelf life
Wow, silly me, I have 026 in my library from the last Vault purge. Will have to re-culture that puppy and put it to work. I just pitched the WLP038. It's far too dark - probably because I did quite a long mash and boil. Anyhoo, it's the taste that counts.Remember that there are other breweries in Manchester - notably Holt's, whose yeast is arguably the closest we've got to Chico in terms of the influence it had in the early days of UK craft beer, it went to Kelham Island, then Thornbridge and then Brewdog.
Personally I wouldn't get too hung up on trying to trace a history, all that matters is that the beer in front of you "works". By all accounts both 026 and 038 do that.
Let me know how this works out? I've got a couple of cubetainers but my first two tries didn't work out very well. They didn't carbonate fully.I had great success with them hooked up to a beer engine, carbonation was spot on (a few pages back you can see some photos).
Now I’ll be serving them via gravity, so I guess we’ll see how it works out.
I did notice if you had some sort of weight on the top to keep the “head” of the Cubitainer from filling with cO2 I got better results. I’m working out some sort of plastic box right now to hold it in.
I’m going to put 2.5gallons of mild in one soon and the other 2.5 in a primed keg with a cO2 injector. Will post results here.
How about naturally carbing in keg to about 1.8-2 vol and then serving at ~10c? That's what I plan on doing when I get to start kegging my beers. A compromise between getting a cask-like feel and actually getting a beer engine + everything else.I agree with this. I've also had a heck of a time getting the proper carbonation level in them because they are a bit stretchy and fiddly with the fill level. I have more or less given up on them to be honest because I don't tend to drink a gallon of beer in a sitting, and (while its not REAL ale) I can live with the compromise of force carbonated bitter for the convenience and shelf life
English stouts that I've made came out with not enough residual sugar for me using 1968.Best so far is clearly verdant IPA. Notti is ok but is really clean, so wouldn't be my choice if your are into expressive yeasts. Verdant really delivers that British character, I know of no other dry yeast that does and I tried nearly all of the British ones.
How about naturally carbing in keg to about 1.8-2 vol and then serving at ~10c? That's what I plan on doing when I get to start kegging my beers. A compromise between getting a cask-like feel and actually getting a beer engine + everything else.
How about naturally carbing in keg to about 1.8-2 vol and then serving at ~10c? That's what I plan on doing when I get to start kegging my beers. A compromise between getting a cask-like feel and actually getting a beer engine + everything else.
I guess keeping a kegerator at 10c will be easier when you brew almost exclusively brittish and other styles that benefit from slightly warmer serving temps...
Please! Hope you have a great drink!Thank you very much
Shelton Brothers went out of business; they imported Landlord, as well as many other world-class beers. Their annual beer festival was amazing.Whatever happened to Timothy Taylor Landlord? I used to buy it at BevMo or Total Wine, now I can’t find it anywhere.
I’ve brewed three batches of it based on Northern Brewer’s recipe, one was so spot on I couldn’t tell the difference!