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Winter Seasonal Beer Great Lakes Christmas Ale Clone

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Sounds like you've got a good plan to me machado!

Having your batch ready by x-mas might be a little tight though...
 
I keg so it shouldn't be a problem for me to have it ready by Christmas. I typically go from grain to glass in about 3-4 weeks with most of my beers depending on the style. I'm sure this one will be better as it ages but I'm optimistic that it will be very drinkable in a month.
 
Shinglejohn said:
At what temperature did your ferment? SHouldnt be an alcohol odor, though if your not accustomed to british style yeast, they can be pretty estery during fermentation. Good news is, they clean up after themselves pretty well.

I think it was just because main fermentation had JUST completed that I got that odor... I changed fermenters from a fridge to a chest freezer, so I'd never been able to smell right from the top before, at least at that early stage....

I sampled at 7 days and it was down to 1.014 and I didn't get that same smell.

I fermented between 62-66 over the course of a week, and its been sitting at 68 for about 10 days at this point, I'll look to keg it maybe Sunday, if not ill wait another week just to let it condition a bit more.
 
I just recently attempted my first all grain batch. I brewed this recipe - scaled down to a 3 gallon batch due to my equipment limitations. Brewed in a bag on the stove top and then dunk sparged in a separate pot.

When I brewed two weeks ago, the OG was at 1.073 and now it's at 1.006. This calculates to a 92% attenuation. Is this even possible or were one of my measurements likely off? Mash temps were upper 150s and I pitched a 1 liter starter of Wyeast Labs #1028 London Ale. Fermentation temps were right around 65 degrees for 2 weeks so far.

I was hoping this would finish a little higher and not be so dry.
 
My guess is that one of your hydrometer readings was off or your mash temp was closer to the higher 140's creating a more fermentable wort.
 
Your hydro is off, or you picked up a bug. 1028 typically wont go that low. Not impossible but not likely. How does it taste?

I just recently attempted my first all grain batch. I brewed this recipe - scaled down to a 3 gallon batch due to my equipment limitations. Brewed in a bag on the stove top and then dunk sparged in a separate pot.

When I brewed two weeks ago, the OG was at 1.073 and now it's at 1.006. This calculates to a 92% attenuation. Is this even possible or were one of my measurements likely off? Mash temps were upper 150s and I pitched a 1 liter starter of Wyeast Labs #1028 London Ale. Fermentation temps were right around 65 degrees for 2 weeks so far.

I was hoping this would finish a little higher and not be so dry.
 
Your hydro is off, or you picked up a bug. 1028 typically wont go that low. Not impossible but not likely. How does it taste?

I ended up bottling this last weekend with a FG of 1.006. As for taste, the ginger is very prominent right now, so it's really hard to say how this is going turn out. I'm sure it's going to be drinkable, but may not be as close to the GLCA as I was hoping. Only time will tell. It seems a little dry, but not as bad as I was expecting at this FG.

I have these carbonating and conditioning in a closet right now where the temp fluctuates between 67F and 72F. They will have been bottled for 23 days on Christmas Eve. What are my chances of this being ready to drink by then?
 
I think you will be just fine. I'd say check one after 2 weeks and again at 3 weeks. Pop them into the fridge a day or two before Christmas Eve. Now I know this isn't proven to work but you can even turn each bottle upside down once or twice every week just to get the yeast moving around a little more. I got my barleywine carbed up in 3 weeks just fine when I did this. I probably should've done it to half of them and then tried one of each every week to compare.
 
I ended up bottling this last weekend with a FG of 1.006. As for taste, the ginger is very prominent right now, so it's really hard to say how this is going turn out. I'm sure it's going to be drinkable, but may not be as close to the GLCA as I was hoping. Only time will tell. It seems a little dry, but not as bad as I was expecting at this FG.

I have these carbonating and conditioning in a closet right now where the temp fluctuates between 67F and 72F. They will have been bottled for 23 days on Christmas Eve. What are my chances of this being ready to drink by then?

Mine finished pretty low too....1.010. I am beginning to think all my thermometers are off and I'm mashing lower then I think. My last few beers have finished dry. The beer tasted decent though, I lowered the ginger slightly to around 3/4-7/8 oz. I'll give it one more week and it's getting kegged. Just in time for Christmas :ban:
 
I bottled mine yesterday....still had the clove, banana, and ginger taste going on....hopefully it tastes more like xmas ale after it bottle conditions. Still has that estery taste from the london ale yeast.
 
mine bottled for about 6 months, the ginger subsided a little bit but not as much as I hoped it would. Still tasted fantastic but was more of what Southern Tier 2Xmas tastes like.
 
Added a tiny bit of cinnamon to the keg. Got it much more in line with where i wanted it. Id back down the ginger and up cinnamon in future batches.
 
Added a tiny bit of cinnamon to the keg. Got it much more in line with where i wanted it. Id back down the ginger and up cinnamon in future batches.


This is what I'm planning on doing for my next batch of this brew. I've only made 2 batches of an extract version of this recipe and I'm going to be brewing my first attempt at this AG recipe soon. Per emails from Great Lakes, they recommended equal amounts of ginger and cinnamon. My first batch I steeped 1.5 oz of both ginger and cinnamon and it was very strong with the ginger. My second batch I knocked it back to 1.25 oz of both ginger and cinnamon and it was still overpowering with the ginger but not as much as my first batch. Both batches were still very good as my wife loves them so they must be good. That said, for my next AG batch, I think I'm going to cut the ginger back to .75 oz and keep the cinnamon at 1.25-1.5 oz. and see how that turns out.
 
Did any of you guys wash your yeast after this batch? Not sure if an extra washing would rid the yeast of the cinnamon and ginger?
 
I brewed NB's Brickwarmer which also uses Wyeast 1028. That recipe calls for sweet orange peel steeped for the last 5 minutes of the boil and I removed them when I racked the wort to primary. I'm planning on washing the yeast from that batch tonight and using it to make a starter for my next batch of this recipe.

So far, the only beers I've made with 1028 are this Christmas Ale clone and the Brickwarmer so I'm not concerned about some residual cinnamon or clove flavors.
 
Took a sample yesterday, it tastes great! Might be the best I've brewed yet! Finished dryer at 08, but I don't think it's worse for it!

Thanks for the recipe!

image-3553544038.jpg
 
Kegging tonight. The hydrometer samples are simply amazing. This isn't an everyday beer but it is my favorite effort overall. Thanks much for the recipe!
 
I've had this kegged for about 2 weeks now. I rushed this one a bit and it shows. It's still very young (brewed Dec 2). I backed the ginger down to 7/8 oz but it's still pretty strong right now. The cinnamon was very faint so I added 2 sticks to the keg. I think I'll have to let this one sit for a few more weeks.
 
I've had this kegged for about 2 weeks now. I rushed this one a bit and it shows. It's still very young (brewed Dec 2). I backed the ginger down to 7/8 oz but it's still pretty strong right now. The cinnamon was very faint so I added 2 sticks to the keg. I think I'll have to let this one sit for a few more weeks.

I had way too much ginger! It backed off significantly after a few weeks in secondary but its still too strong. I just brewed another batch yesterday without the spices to mix with the first batch. Looking forward to splitting it between 2 kegs in a couple weeks. Maybe I'll save one keg for Christmas in July, lol.

Good luck,
JB
 
I like this beer but I just mine has a really strong honey flavor. I'm not a huge honey fan and I wonder what the best way is to dial that back. A little less honey? Add the honey a little earlier in the boil?
 
I like this beer but I just mine has a really strong honey flavor. I'm not a huge honey fan and I wonder what the best way is to dial that back. A little less honey? Add the honey a little earlier in the boil?

Honey should not really impart flavor to the beer. What kind did you use? What temp did you ferment at and for how long?

JB
 
One pound of clover honey. Fermented at 62-64 for 21 days then kegged. Honey was added at flameout.
 
One pound of clover honey. Fermented at 62-64 for 21 days then kegged. Honey was added at flameout.

I used clove honey, too, and do not have any honey flavor in mine. Sure you're not tasting residual sweetness from the malt?

Tell us about your brew day (mash temps, gravities, etc). London Ale yeast can lend some fruitiness that might be confusing your palate. Is that possible?

JB
 
Tried mine after 12 days, was pretty decent, after 18 days it tastes like cough medicine. Waiting it out another week or two and/or hoping that was just a bad bottle?
 
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