Thanks for the heads up!:rockin:
This sounds great, it will be added to the list, maybe it'll get oaked.
cheers
make it once... then adjust, thats the best way to go
that being said..... if this tastes as i expect, some oak could be quite tasty!
Thanks for the heads up!:rockin:
This sounds great, it will be added to the list, maybe it'll get oaked.
cheers
What do you guess a good carb. level on this would be?
So, I am going to brew this over the weekend. I will bottle the first half after 2 weeks in the primary. The second half I will transfer to secondary and age for a month on 1oz oak cubes that are soaked in bourbon (sanitizes and adds flavor).
If I use 6-row instead of 2-row is there anything I should keep in mind (longer boil, etc.)? I have never used it before so I am not familiar with what I should do differently with it.
http://brewingtechniques.com/library/backissues/issue3.5/renner.htmlBecause American six-row barley malt is too high in protein to make stable beers, corn was first used to dilute the protein. Cost-cutting was a bonus - a bonus that soon got out of hand. The use of 20% corn, however, is a delightful flavor addition.
also, will i need a yeast starter for this? my instinct is to say no, because gravity is so low (guessing a vial of wlp will suffice), but i wanted to be sure.
Hmmm, wonder what would be the best category to enter this under for a comp? Specialty beer?
Hmmm, wonder what would be the best category to enter this under for a comp? Specialty beer?
Either that or American Brown.
ODaniel, what's the best recipe for this that you have done?
Hmmm, wonder what would be the best category to enter this under for a comp? Specialty beer?
My sourness was VERY subtle.
Yeah mine are pretty subtle. Noticeable, but subtle. You can always mash longer if you want more sourness, but IMO that makes it less of a session beer, for me anyways.
Well, I don't know that I would worry about it as much. You could definitely do what he recommended, but even if some of the bacteria survive on your mash tun, everything you put through that thing in the future is still going to get boiled before it goes in the primary right? So if you contaminate future brews, you'll kill off any living organisms before you ferment anyway. Now if you are reusing that thing as a bottling bucket or something, then I'd be a little concerned...
The sour flavor is already imparted by the time you boil the wort, that is why a sour mash works in regards to souring. Boiling does not remove the sour flavor, even if it does kill off living organisms - or else sour mash would not work. Thus, any souring agents created by doing the sour mash that are left behind in the mash tun would affect the next beers made even given the boil.
How have the beers you guys have made directly after the Kentucky Common turned out?
I have run out of time on brew days and dumped my grains the next day. Man they stink. But then you wash the tun and it's fine for the next brew. No worries man.![]()
+1 on not being too concerned about doing a sour mash in your mash tun. Grain is loaded with Bacteria and wild yeast, so every time you mash you are starting with a level of contamination.