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Starting an American Cream Ale tonight

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dpalme

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2012
Messages
438
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Location
Wright City, MO
Got the pot on, 3 gallons of water coming to a boil......

Its supposed to be a light bodied, easy drinkable beer with about 4.75 abv, with that clean crisp pop with a hoppy flavor....

I might even bottle this batch versus kegging.....

Picked up another case of Sam Adams tonight so I will have more bottles to use :) Hey take out the price of the bottles (.80 ea) and I only pay .30 for the beer :)
 
Got the water to a raging boil right at 20 minutes.....added the extract and bittering hops and we are now 8 minutes into the 60 minute cooking time. At 40 I'll drop the flavor hops and away we go!

Now for a Sam Adams while I wait.
 
Got the water to a raging boil right at 20 minutes.....added the extract and bittering hops and we are now 8 minutes into the 60 minute cooking time. At 40 I'll drop the flavor hops and away we go!

Now for a Sam Adams while I wait.

Quit it... you are making me want to brew... don't have any ingredients right now... NOT NICE! :mad:
 
Picture of the extract at the final end of the boil.

boil.jpg
 
Cream ale is on my list of things to do in the next couple months. What yeast are you using? I have some washed and saved San Francisco Lager Yeast from a California Common I might give it a shot with.
 
Just bottled a cream ale Sunday night, a little over on the style guidelines (1.059 actual OG, high end for category 1.055). FG 1.012, tastes lightly citrus from the hops, also lightly sweet from the flaked maize/malt combination, should be VERY easy drinking, hehehe...Used yeast harvested from a batch of amber ale using WLP001 (White Labs). Very happy with the results. Good job on your brew, btw!
 
I make so many dark beers, hoppy IPA's that I am going to try a Cream Ale. Here's one my LHBS guru put together for me today. I'm not sure about the yeast yet and may just use 05.
I have everything but the yeast so far.
It only called for 1 oz of Clusters but I just had to add something to it to give it a little more aroma. At least it's a session beer and good for lawn work. And, it should be ready pretty quick too!

Metry Cream Ale
American Pale Ale

Recipe Specs
----------------
Batch Size (G): 5.2
Total Grain (lb): 10.000
Total Hops (oz): 2.00
Original Gravity (OG): 1.049 (°P): 12.1
Final Gravity (FG): 1.012 (°P): 3.1
Alcohol by Volume (ABV): 4.81 %
Colour (SRM): 4.0 (EBC): 7.9
Bitterness (IBU): 23.5 (Average)
Brewhouse Efficiency (%): 70
Boil Time (Minutes): 60

Grain Bill
----------------
3.000 lb American 2-Row (30%)
3.000 lb American 6-Row (30%)
3.000 lb Flaked Corn (30%)
1.000 lb Munich I (10%)

Hop Bill
----------------
1.00 oz Cluster Pellet (5.7% Alpha) @ 60 Minutes (Boil) (0.2 oz/Gal)
1.00 oz Mt. Hood Pellet (5.2% Alpha) @ 0 Minutes (Boil) (0.2 oz/Gal)

Misc Bill
----------------

Single step Infusion at 151°F for 60 Minutes.
Fermented at 68°F with WLP080 - Cream Ale Blend
 
Just brewed Biermuncher's Cream of 3 Crops last weekend. Maize, Rice, 2-row and a light bittering hop (EKG in my case). Hoping it turns out like a wayyy better BMC, so...not really a BMC at all :D
 
Cream ale is on my list of things to do in the next couple months. What yeast are you using? I have some washed and saved San Francisco Lager Yeast from a California Common I might give it a shot with.

Obviously you'll want to ferment that down in the 50's if possible. Swamp cooler in basement or cool lower level with ice-bottles (or ferm chamber) would be ideal.
 
brewed a batch of cream ale myself about 4 weeks ago, just bottled last week, came out very tasty! I used washed yeast from White Labs California Ale WLP001 and got outstanding results! Og 1.059 (a little high for the style, but close), FG 1.012. Something to think about.
 
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