beeraroundtown1
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Yah, both are Blaugies origin
I used to make water kiefer which is similar, i was using half gallon mason jars.When making Kombucha, what do you guys use for a fermentation vessel?
When making Kombucha, what do you guys use for a fermentation vessel?
I guess I should never give up on a HB. Give it time and it may just become drinkable.
One of my employees gave me some homebrew to try and it's full of extract twang, chlorophenols, and acetaldehyde.. How do I break it to him nicely?
How did you determine the beer is too young?Tell him to be more patient next time. The beer is too young (acetylhyde). And maybe casually ask about chlorine in his water/fermentation temp.
How did you determine the beer is too young?
How did you determine the beer is too young?
What causes that extract twang anyway?One of my employees gave me some homebrew to try and it's full of extract twang, chlorophenols, and acetaldehyde.. How do I break it to him nicely?
If there is one thing I've learned judging beers, it's that making a definitive assumption about the cause of a flaw is a good way to make the rest of your (actually useful feedback) questionable as well if you are wrong.How did you determine the beer is too young?
A great brewer will make great beer with extract, ****** brewers will make underattenuated or scorched or poorly fermented or whatever else we think of as 'extract' flavors brewing all-grain.What causes that extract twang anyway?
Agree with all of the above, but I will say that something ****** up with time, oxygen and/or pitch size has a strong connection to pretty much every fermentation-related flaw there is. Usually all three with really new brewers.If there is one thing I've learned judging beers, it's that making a definitive assumption about the cause of a flaw is a good way to make the rest of your (actually useful feedback) questionable as well if you are wrong.
A great brewer will make great beer with extract, ****** brewers will make underattenuated or scorched or poorly fermented or whatever else we think of as 'extract' flavors brewing all-grain.
How did you determine the beer is too young?
I was really just taking an educated guess. Acetylhyde is produced early in fermentation and is cleaned up by the yeast with time.
I was thinking about brewing an English Barleywine this weekend, using just Maris Otter and a 3-hour boil. However, I am getting cold feet, and am wondering if I should add at least a Crystal Malt and maybe a hint of a roasted malt (like, 0.25 lbs of black malt or something).
Has anyone had luck with the single malt and long boil technique? Anyone have a Barleywine recipe without an overly complicated mash bill? Water profile?
Any help would be “much obliged”
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You certainly can make a great barleywine this way. My first run at one was a grain bill split between Maris Otter and Golden Promise and a 5 hour boil. The most recent iteration of that had me add in .25lbs of Special B and a pound of Biscuit (still with the 5 hour boil). I'm due to brew it again in a couple months and I'll probably cut back on the biscuit a little bit, but otherwise I'll be settled with it. Don't remember the target #s, but my next batch will look something like this:
14.5lbs Maris Otter
14.5lbs Golden Promise
0.75lbs Biscuit Malt
0.25lbs Special B
Challenger hops @60-90 minutes (depending on AA% and total target IBUs)
1oz each EKG and Fuggles @15-20 minutes
Pitch an equal amount of Wyeast 1056 and 1968 @ 62F, ramp to 68F after three days. Ramp 2F a day thereafter until you hit 74F and hold there for a few days to let it finish. A good yeast rousing at 4-5 days helps as well with the way that 1968 typically flocs. Leave it in primary 3-4 weeks and then let it spend some time bulk aging in secondary before packaging.
No worries about fusel alcohols at such a high temp?You certainly can make a great barleywine this way. My first run at one was a grain bill split between Maris Otter and Golden Promise and a 5 hour boil. The most recent iteration of that had me add in .25lbs of Special B and a pound of Biscuit (still with the 5 hour boil). I'm due to brew it again in a couple months and I'll probably cut back on the biscuit a little bit, but otherwise I'll be settled with it. Don't remember the target #s, but my next batch will look something like this:
14.5lbs Maris Otter
14.5lbs Golden Promise
0.75lbs Biscuit Malt
0.25lbs Special B
Challenger hops @60-90 minutes (depending on AA% and total target IBUs)
1oz each EKG and Fuggles @15-20 minutes
Pitch an equal amount of Wyeast 1056 and 1968 @ 62F, ramp to 68F after three days. Ramp 2F a day thereafter until you hit 74F and hold there for a few days to let it finish. A good yeast rousing at 4-5 days helps as well with the way that 1968 typically flocs. Leave it in primary 3-4 weeks and then let it spend some time bulk aging in secondary before packaging.
With your 5 hour boil, did you top off with water? Or collect enough runnings to boil down to your target volume?
I have some Munich and a touch of Crystal 60 on hand, so I am thinking of going Maris Otter, Munich, and a half lb of Crystal 60, along with a 3 hour boil.
I also have some S-04 on hand. Debating whether or not I should go your route with the 1056 and 1968, or be lazy and cheap and go with S-04...
With your 5 hour boil, did you top off with water? Or collect enough runnings to boil down to your target volume?
I have some Munich and a touch of Crystal 60 on hand, so I am thinking of going Maris Otter, Munich, and a half lb of Crystal 60, along with a 3 hour boil.
I also have some S-04 on hand. Debating whether or not I should go your route with the 1056 and 1968, or be lazy and cheap and go with S-04...
No worries about fusel alcohols at such a high temp?
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha.Next year...I think I'm going to take the leap, cut my current pay 70% and work for a brewery. I need the experience to do my own thing successfully.
I have my doubts, but I don't wanna live life knowing I didn't give it a shot. That would suck.
EDIT: and depending on neckbeards to pay the bills will also suck.
Next year...I think I'm going to take the leap, cut my current pay 70% and work for a brewery. I need the experience to do my own thing successfully.
I have my doubts, but I don't wanna live life knowing I didn't give it a shot. That would suck.
EDIT: and depending on neckbeards to pay the bills will also suck.
Best of luck! I'm a few months away from getting things going though it's just a side adventure for me so I'll still have my regular schedule as well, but I'm looking forward to it!
Getting the last of my equipment delivered tomorrow and then it's just waiting on TTB!
I'll make sure to post back on whether it was all worth it, though my circumstances are pretty unusual (though of course no two breweries have the same journey) so I'm not sure how everything will translate to others.
sweet and congrats! looking forward to hearing/reading updates!
I would have totally went the part time route had my current job kept my 4 day work week.
My schedule is changing again for the 4th time and I will be working 5 day weeks now :-/
Stoked your finally starting! Learned a lot from your blog!