Hey there, so I'm making my second brew (my first brew was just bread yeast, ginger, sugar, and lemon and lime juice and zest. Not bad, actually). Now I'm thinking Iced Tea (or Sweet Tea as some of the more southern folks here might call it) and I was wondering if you guys could take a look at my planned recipe and tell me what you think?
-6 Tetley Tea Bags (the normal iced tea recipe on the website calls for 4 tea bags for a gallon. I'm doing 1.5x as much to account for flavour lost during fermentation, something I didn't account for in my first ginger ale recipe)
-11oz White Sugar
-10.5oz Brown Sugar
-1g (1/5 of package) Lalvin EC-1118 Champagne Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ex bayanus))
These will all be boiled in 2 quarts for just long enough to sterilize, then the bags will be removed and cold water and ice will be added to bring the volume up to 1 gallon and the temperature down to 70 degrees or so (as per the "virgin" iced tea recipe)
Sweetener (and lemon, plus possibly lime juice) will be added in the glass prior to serving
As well, can anyone give me the name of any products from other brands that use that exact same yeast, or a very similar one? I'm looking for one that hopefully appears on the list of yeasts in this calculator, as I am aiming for approx. 6% or 7% abv and want to get my sugars right:
http://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/calculator/
Additionally, boiling can be minimal, as the simple sugars I'm using can be used by the yeast without mashing/malting, right?
What do you think?
Edit: Oh, plus dechlorination. So I'm looking at closer to 20 minutes on the boil
-6 Tetley Tea Bags (the normal iced tea recipe on the website calls for 4 tea bags for a gallon. I'm doing 1.5x as much to account for flavour lost during fermentation, something I didn't account for in my first ginger ale recipe)
-11oz White Sugar
-10.5oz Brown Sugar
-1g (1/5 of package) Lalvin EC-1118 Champagne Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ex bayanus))
These will all be boiled in 2 quarts for just long enough to sterilize, then the bags will be removed and cold water and ice will be added to bring the volume up to 1 gallon and the temperature down to 70 degrees or so (as per the "virgin" iced tea recipe)
Sweetener (and lemon, plus possibly lime juice) will be added in the glass prior to serving
As well, can anyone give me the name of any products from other brands that use that exact same yeast, or a very similar one? I'm looking for one that hopefully appears on the list of yeasts in this calculator, as I am aiming for approx. 6% or 7% abv and want to get my sugars right:
http://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/calculator/
Additionally, boiling can be minimal, as the simple sugars I'm using can be used by the yeast without mashing/malting, right?
What do you think?
Edit: Oh, plus dechlorination. So I'm looking at closer to 20 minutes on the boil