He accounted for that, he's the go-to person for water analysis there. fwiw the finished beer had 283ppm chloride and 153ppm sulphate
Ahh, carry on then!
He accounted for that, he's the go-to person for water analysis there. fwiw the finished beer had 283ppm chloride and 153ppm sulphate
Would you be able to provide a link for this? I tried a few searches and couldn't find it. Thanks!He accounted for that, he's the go-to person for water analysis there. fwiw the finished beer had 283ppm chloride and 153ppm sulphate
Would you be able to provide a link for this? I tried a few searches and couldn't find it. Thanks!
With the recent recipe postings on SUABP of Mild ales from the 1800's I decided to brew a REAL Mild ale from the 1862 Barclay Perkins XX Mild recipe with the base malt I had hanging around. The exact amounts I don't have a clue, I just dumped what I had together and measured out prior to formulating my recipe. In the base malt I had Baird's Pale, 6 row, Maris Otter and Golden Promise. 19 lbs 10 oz of everything mixed together. Approximately 3 lbs of Baird's, 4 lbs of 6 row and MO and GP made up the rest, just a guess. It's my proprietary blend I call .....Baird's 6 Golden Otters. I also decided to use the last pound of Lyle's I had in the cupboard also.
Here's the recipe...
19 lbs 10 oz B6GO
1 lbs Lyles Golden Syrup
1.62 oz Brewer's Gold 8% AA 90 min
2.16 oz EKG 4.5% AA 60 min
2.16 EKG 4.5% AA 30 min
92 IBU
Whirlfloc 2 tablets
Yeast Nutrient 1 TBSP
1099 (2) 1/2 pint slurrys 3 weeks old
1469 (2) 1/2 pint slurrys 2 weeks old
Oxygenate 1 minute heavy flow
Mash 148F 90 minutes
Boil 90 min
OG was 1087, didn't hit my target of 1095 but oh well. Didn't party gyle either.
It's been fermenting madly since saturday night with the blow off tube going wild. The smell is fantastic, candied malt orange fruit.
My plan is to bottle half and age till Xmas and the other half keg and drink within a month. Or secondary with Bret C.
Just kicked a keg of a killer porter. Still trying to dial in the recipe, but I really liked this iteration. 1028 is amazing in darker and malty beers.
8lb 14oz Crisp Maris Otter (73.6%)
2lb 14oz Crisp Brown Malt (23.8%)
5oz Black Patent (2.6%)
24ibu Pilgrim hops
Wyeast 1028. Pitch 65º, ferment 68º
With the recent recipe postings on SUABP of Mild ales from the 1800's I decided to brew a REAL Mild ale from the 1862 Barclay Perkins XX Mild recipe with the base malt I had hanging around. The exact amounts I don't have a clue, I just dumped what I had together and measured out prior to formulating my recipe. In the base malt I had Baird's Pale, 6 row, Maris Otter and Golden Promise. 19 lbs 10 oz of everything mixed together. Approximately 3 lbs of Baird's, 4 lbs of 6 row and MO and GP made up the rest, just a guess. It's my proprietary blend I call .....Baird's 6 Golden Otters. I also decided to use the last pound of Lyle's I had in the cupboard also.
Here's the recipe...
19 lbs 10 oz B6GO
1 lbs Lyles Golden Syrup
1.62 oz Brewer's Gold 8% AA 90 min
2.16 oz EKG 4.5% AA 60 min
2.16 EKG 4.5% AA 30 min
92 IBU
Whirlfloc 2 tablets
Yeast Nutrient 1 TBSP
1099 (2) 1/2 pint slurrys 3 weeks old
1469 (2) 1/2 pint slurrys 2 weeks old
Oxygenate 1 minute heavy flow
Mash 148F 90 minutes
Boil 90 min
OG was 1087, didn't hit my target of 1095 but oh well. Didn't party gyle either.
It's been fermenting madly since saturday night with the blow off tube going wild. The smell is fantastic, candied malt orange fruit.
My plan is to bottle half and age till Xmas and the other half keg and drink within a month. Or secondary with Bret C.
Brewed another golden ale, same grist as the last one but I went for a single infusion @152F instead of a step mash and went with a longer brewlength so got an OG of 1.040. Also changed the yeast, did a co pitch of London ESB and an american pale ale yeast from a new company here
OG 1.040
30 to 40 IBU
88.4 % Pilsner malt
8.4 % carahell
3.2 % Torrified wheat
Atlas 30g FWH
Cascade US 100g Steep 15 mins
Atlas 20g Steep 15 mins
Crossmyloof Brewery US Pale Ale yeast 10g
London ESB yeast 11g
I just sprinkled the yeast this time as my OG was nice and low and it was two packets for the batch. Hoping the US yeast takes it down nice and low and the ESB to give some fruityness to it. If it goes well I'll probably reuse the cake for a nice big burton/historic IPA
BTW, anyone in the UK want some good value yeast then look out for Crossmyloof ones, they are supposed to be made in germany and have a kolsch, california common etc dried yeasts. Works out at 80p a pack when you order 10 of them :0 I'm going to use the kolsch yeast in my next golden ale I think
On ebay or through their facebook page
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Home-Brew...hash=item3d3edfaa78:m:mDDFp2zuleaRjJL03uuYdow
Gimme a T for Texas a T for Tennessee![]()
Is this your first time using them? Is the real ale yeast repackaged Nottingham?
Yeah first time for me. No idea if any are exactly the same as the other usual suspects.
If you want a cheaper version of Nottingham then Gervin GV12 ale yeast is the same strain for sure
Took a reading last night...
FG 1.011 10.2% ABV
Kegging tonight to be ready for the weekend of the 4th.
Damn delicious and deadly with no alcohol detection.
So easy drinking. One is enough.
View attachment 407303
Brewed another golden ale, same grist as the last one but I went for a single infusion @152F instead of a step mash and went with a longer brewlength so got an OG of 1.040. Also changed the yeast, did a co pitch of London ESB and an american pale ale yeast from a new company here
OG 1.040
30 to 40 IBU
88.4 % Pilsner malt
8.4 % carahell
3.2 % Torrified wheat
Atlas 30g FWH
Cascade US 100g Steep 15 mins
Atlas 20g Steep 15 mins
Crossmyloof Brewery US Pale Ale yeast 10g
London ESB yeast 11g
bottled this today.
FG 1.008, so co pitching the Crossmyloof pale ale yeast worked to ensure the ESB yeast didn't finish too high . However even after a full ten days chilling, it is still very hazy. Taste is nice and fruity, decent body to it too although its not carbed obviously. I think it's a bit low on the IBUs too, probably closer to 25
I'm of the firm belief that our homebrew setups undershoot IBUs by as much as a third relative to calculated. I go for high IBU and that has improved my beer.
Did you like Atlas?
I'm of the firm belief that our homebrew setups undershoot IBUs by as much as a third relative to calculated. I go for high IBU and that has improved my beer.
Did you like Atlas?
I stick with Brewers Friend for recipe formulation and I find the IBU calculations are reasonable, at least for my tastes.