Barley_Bob
Well-Known Member
I can't get over the mouthfeel of this beer. I'm really going to try to replicate that in all of my future brews. Not that I'm sure I'll be successful, but it's just damn impressive.
I agree on the mouthfeel. With such a simple recipe, every ingredient really contributes something to the final product. The oats in particular with the mouthfeel.
On a related note, I have started replacing carapils with either flaked barley, oats, or rye, recipe dependent, in all my beers, especially session strength brews that can often come across as thin.
So those of you that added the honey & molasses @ flame out were following how Hr. Hermbstatd's experiments duplicated the beer, for which no original recipe was left. I feel, at this juncture, that I must concede this point. The FG sample tasted dry, with a hint of sweetness the beer was said to have. Then secondary with the honey & molasses turned it to more like a saison. Lesson learned there, as it seems adding the two @ flame out seems likely to preserve the dry , hint of sweetness finish. Gotta brew this one again.
I have to leave at 9:30 to help my older son & his fiance move to their new digs. I'll be driving the truck. Maybe do a video tomorrow?Did you ever try my Kottbusser? I still have yours in the fridge... I keep waiting for a day where I'm not too overly tired or distracted to enjoy it. Maybe Sunday?
Next time, I'll be adding the honey & molasses @ flame out, like Hr Hermstadt did. I may add the rest too? I have high hopes that this next one will nail it with the two process changes? It seems quite fitting for an Octoberfest party! Or maybe even that German beer competition that was advertised on here last year?I'm brewing mine again for an Oktoberfest the club is doing. It certainly did have a hint of sweetness in the finish that I loved.
The very dry finish is a hallmark of the kottbusser style, with a hint of sweetness with it. So that should be ok.
When I get my computer fixed again, I'll do a comparison video between mine & barley_bob's versions. Damn hackers...
Since I got my desktop computer fixed & found all my book files, I'm back to work on book 2 of my home brewing series. I just wanted to remind you folks brewing this beer that if you want your recipe included in the book, to send me a bottle to compare against mine & others, along with the recipe in a PM or something. Some different examples would prove interesting to figuring out which one seems closer to the original, or which is best at the very least. Maybe in trade for a link-back to your blog or something?
Wow. Your taste descriptions beat heck out of mine. My recipe is a compilation of what descriptions I could find. I used .6oz Value Time "unsulphured" Golden molasses & 1.3oz Gunter's Clover honey in secondary. I couldn't make up my mind on when to add them. Odd that it had that dry finish moreso before secondary as after. I also used 4ozs acidulated malt in the mash, feeling that this might give that bit of tartness that some mistook for souring. I used .65oz magnum for bittering & 1oz saaz @ 3 minutes. German halertau @ 3 minutes as well. Maybe need to bump the hops to 8 or 10 minutes? Or maybe dig some more & find out what hops were used around Cottbus at the time? Being close to the Western border of Poland, & the NW border of the Czech republic, saaz was a logical choice. But the right one? Maybe some Polish hops, or Serbian?
I also used 3lbs of German wheat malt, feeling I should keep things as German-originated as possible, save for the hops. I'm sure it's also responsible for the slight mistiness? So I do think the combination of secondarying the honey & molasses worked some kind of magic with the acidulated malt & the WL029 yeast to give the qualities mentioned.
I also made a starter with the remaining .17lb of pilsner LME ( jugs are like 3.15lbs) in 800ml spring water. Yeast tube was added @ 85.1F. That was on 2/2/15,cold crashed 2/5/15. Brew day was 2/10/15 & grains crushed @ .039". Mashed 7.5lbs grains, oats, rice hulls in 2 1/4 gallons spring water @ 154F one hour. Dunk sparged 10 minutes @ 168F. Same as sachrification rest of 7 minutes BS2 called for? Yeast decanted to about 200ml, pitched into 62.5F wort. Fermentation started @ 64F, one degree below WL029's sweet spot. * Yeast was about half-frozen by the time ingredients shipment got here, so maybe starter helped? The weather was so cold, I had to fire of the kerosene heater to bring ambient temps up. Took a couple days to get internal primary temp to about 68F, maybe 68.5F? I think this combination of things accounts for the flavors, etc?
Since it's been cloudy & raining every day here, I haven't had enough light in the brewery to do the video comparison. I'll get to it as soon as I can. Looking forward to it.