Refractometer is good for SG/OG.. but, not very good for any gravities after the yeast is pitched. You probably know that..
pgbrewing said:Just spotted this thread so I'm a little late to it but I brewed 2 batches of this same kit this spring for my daughter's wedding. I added 1 quart of pure tart cherry juice to each batch when the wort cooled to 150. OG was 1.045, FG was 1.011. A slight fruit aroma and a little extra grip in the taste with a nice smooth finish. Perfect summer beer!
This beer was huge hit at the wedding last weekend! All 4 cases gone in one night!
Oh man, that sounds awesome. Where'd you get the juice?
i do spices in the boil, herbs in primary or secondary depending on my mood. For adding everything in secondary, i'd probably make a tea. I generally don't reference specific recipes for style because I prefer Designing Great Beers, which does a good job of bracketing characteristics. You can definitely make the non-sage additions and still be in the ranges and flavor descriptions. The sage in the amounts I mentioned becomes primarily aromatic and marries well to the normal saison funk.
So while I agree that you shouldn't generally make style-altering additions until you're familiar with the base style, this particular kit isn't a very saison-y saison and the flavor profiles we're talking about definitely improve it.
Bottled this today, both versions. Tasted both, no off flavors. Seemed fairly representative of the style. The sage in the treated batch was pretty apparent in the finish, but not over whelming. Both orange and sage are lightly present in the aroma. Can't wait for it to carb up.