Cream ale on deck for tomorrow.
@Zadkiel
You could always add some boiled water to get your target alcohol level.
When you say 93% efficiency which efficiency do you mean, you achieved your target volume and had more extraction?
You know what's IS right? A beer that tastes good, so it sounds like that 1 is right.
Yeah, it looks very grey, i questioned that when i posted that pic. I think it was spinning so fast that it makes it looks whitish.That starter is an interesting colour, mine are always much more orange.
“Wow! I feel good, I knew that I would!Brewing now... Just mashed in an American Brown Ale, and evolution of 8 batches over the last year that became Live At The Apollo (James Brown Tribute). So tasty and my third iteration of the same recipe. Love it! About 5.8% ABV to 6% depending on how dry or sweet I want it to be. centennial and Magnum hops in the last 30 minutes/20 minutes.
Baird's MO 56.6%. (3L)“Wow! I feel good, I knew that I would!
I feel nice; sugar & spice…
Post that tribute recipe, to the Godfather of Soul!
I like the idea of using Red X with the Brown for color. I imagine it gives a beautiful mahogany tone to the beer. Oats for body and mouthfeel, mix of coffee and chocolate malts for flavor. Looks like a great malt bill!Baird's MO 56.6%. (3L)
RED X 21.1%. (11L)
Brown Ale 10.2%. (65L)
Flaked Oats 7.1%
Chocolate 3.5% (350L)
Coffee. 1.3%. (150L)
Hop addition
30 min centennial
20 min magnum
Yeast US-05
ABV 6.0%
SRM 24
IBU 27
Single step mash at 149.7°F for 60 minutes. 60 min boil. Whirlfloc, whirlpool, etc.
Sometimes I add some carapils for a foamier, longer lasting head. (12 oz for a 8 gal batch is typical).I like the idea of using Red X with the Brown for color. I imagine it gives a beautiful mahogany tone to the beer. Oats for body and mouthfeel, mix of coffee and chocolate malts for flavor. Looks like a great malt bill!
That’s a red hot record. Keep up the winning streak. Don’t want to jinx the rally, but at some point (maybe the inevitable slump) you might try putting in a ‘reliever’ like chit malt in place for carapils. I’ve been experimenting with it and it’s proving to be a good ‘closer’ for foam, body and stability.Sometimes I add some carapils for a foamier, longer lasting head. (12 oz for a 8 gal batch is typical).
This is my go to "rally" beer for brewer's baseball games. When I pour a glass, we score runs. So... It is vital that I have a healthy batch as we approach October. The last batch was brewed in late May. We are like 45-16 since then... Almost a .750 clip . Crazy.
Carolina Malt offered chit malt. Almost got some but still have to go thru about 10+ lbs of carapils. I am going to try it on my next re-up from the local malt house.That’s a red hot record. Keep up the winning streak. Don’t want to jinx the rally, but at some point (maybe the inevitable slump) you might try putting in a ‘reliever’ like chit malt in place for carapils. I’ve been experimenting with it and it’s proving to be a good ‘closer’ for foam, body and stability.
That's an interesting fermenter.Mild ale ( starter build for barley wine ) next weekend. With a parti gyle best planned as well.View attachment 882038
Going nicely in my Burton Solo with WLP099.
Genius!Mild ale ( starter build for barley wine ) next weekend. With a parti gyle best planned as well.View attachment 882038
Going nicely in my Burton Solo with WLP099.
I'm still trying to wrap my head around these while referencing this.The first version of the Solo Union used a Firkin so looked a little more realistic but 43 litres was a bit much in cask for me to wade through, lucky an event at brew club sorted that problem out. View attachment 882056View attachment 882058
It just pours out clean yeast for repitching at the top, it's brilliant.
16.5 lb of Carolina Gold (like MO)
There are a lot more breweries around here (Carolina) than most places. Asheville has become the "Milwaukee" of craft beer with the big boys setting up shop over the last 10-15 years near the French Broad River. Sierra Nevada, New Belgium, Wicked Weed and White Labs to name a few. Asheville is crazy for beer and make excellent suds.This interests me as it has triggered a memory of an old 'fact' as told to me by a serious brewer a long time ago (20ish years ago).
I expressed to him an irritation that on a recent visit to the US (in 2003), my attempts to find local craft beer had resulted in finding craft beer stores which were almost entirely filled with IPAs, one of my least favourite styles. Brewer friend told me that IPAs were so popular in US craft beer because US malts had much less variety than we have here in UK/EU due to geographic and environmental reasons, that only a smaller range of grain would successfully grow there compared to here, so for a small brewery to 'stand out' from the competition, different malt bills didn't result in a big enough differentiation, while hops were king of variety, so craft breweries (at that time, 20ish years ago) ended up doing battle with IPAs.
I'm curious how much that has changed with time - science and agriculture advances are inevitable and this was a long time ago, so it wouldn't surprise me to learn that this is a solved problem now.
That is awesome!The first version of the Solo Union used a Firkin so looked a little more realistic but 43 litres was a bit much in cask for me to wade through, lucky an event at brew club sorted that problem out. View attachment 882056View attachment 882058
It just pours out clean yeast for repitching at the top, it's brilliant.
Thank you, it's great fun to use. Filling the cask.That is awesome!
Thought the same thing.Lodo-ites are losing their poopy right about now![]()