Yes it is fresh ginger, and you can either add the spices 5 mins before boil is complete...Or omit the spices and add a "Tea" to secondary. hope this helps
Wow, I checked the hydro sample to see if it's ready to be transferred to secondary on the spice tea and man did it taste awesome!
I havne't done the spice tea yet. which one?
Nope, I didn't put any spice in the boil.
This is what i'm not getting. Does that much of the spice go away during fermentation? I just don't see that happening.
Not really. I think people opt for the tea so they can progressively add spices rather than hoping to get it correct the first time in the boil. Some people like their pumpkin ales with more spice than others. Using the tea, they can add spice to taste.
I just used the amount of spice given in the recipe scaled down to 5 gallons in the boil. Turned out just fine in my opinion.
All great suggestions in the past few posts. I keg mine quickly (about 3-4 weeks), and it turns out fine. The spices don't fade quickly, so if you're not sure about the amounts listed, add the spices incrementally to taste by using the tea method.
I really prefer the Pampered Chef "Cinnamon Plus" as the only spice addition. A teaspoon is PLENTY for a five gallon batch. 1/2 tsp of the stuff at flameout would probably be adequate.
I think you can order it online. I dunno. SWMBO gets it.
EDIT: You can get it here:
http://www.pamperedchef.com/ordering/prod_details.tpc?prodId=13857&catId=12
FURTHER EDIT: This link claims a copycat recipe for Cinnamon Plus. I can't vouch for its accuracy.
http://www.food.com/recipe/baking-spice-copycat-pampered-chef-cinnamon-plus-mix-45672
The same amount of a decent pumpkin pie spice mix would likely do just fine. I prefer more cinnamon than allspice both in my beer and my pumpkin pie. Many pumpkin pie spice mixes are heavy on the allspice. You can always very lightly sprinkle a bit of the spice mix on some vanilla ice cream to get an idea of the flavor profile.
I thought the amount of ginger was great. I really like ginger, though. I used fresh ginger root and used a cheese grater on it until I reached the required amount. Powdered ginger stinks, in my opinion. It has nowhere near the flavor of real ginger.
So my usual impatience got the better of me, and I tried this after two weeks in the bottle. My gravity readings were way off on brew day, fermented to warm, I didnt think there was enough biscuit to get the taste I was hoping for, so I was interested to see how far off it got.
Ended up turning out great! No green taste to speak of, perfect balance, just the right amount of spice. Exactly what I was looking for. One more case to chalk up to RDWHAHB. I do think I need to calibrate my hydro though...
I just brought 1 cup of water to a boil, shut off the heat, mixed in the spices. let it cool down, poured it into the bottling bucket and racked over it.
Awesome thanks.. that's exactly what I was going to do. How long did you have it in your fermenters before you bottled? Also did you use 1 or 1.5 tsp of spice?
My friend is throwing his annual "Lobster Party" and wanted to have this thing kegged and ready by saturday...It has been in secondary for a little over a week now. I was wondering if anyone sees this as a problem? I was just gunna go for it, and see what happens since its his batch and not mine...aren't I a good friend!