Another Central Coast beer being enjoyed in the Midwest.

What'd you think of it?
I think you’d be better off asking your doctor.I tend to sweat a lot nowadays, and having hard time to stop sweating excessively.
Can alcohol be one of the reason for excessive sweating?
I don't get it.
You won the internet today. Absolute best post by anyone, anywhere.HB Imperial Chocolate Oat Stout on nitro:
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Just got my nitro keezer up and running, gotta use it:You won the internet today. Absolute best post by anyone, anywhere.
Hmmm... I love Nottingham, but for a cream ale I'd go Lutra.Carb check on the cream ale I kegged on Sunday. Too many moving parts on this one.
Right now, this one is pretty gnarly.
I’m normally a very systematic brewer, small adjustments yield big gains in time. I thought it would be a fun exercise after the years-long,highly disciplined, and incremental Panther Piss Project to do something a bit wild.
I intentionally did everything wrong on this beer. I ditched my proven water profile and went back to ultra-soft water. I bought into the hype that Nottingham yeast has changed and now is a super yeast that does all things at all temps. I also tried Lemondrop hops for the first time.
I like the Lemondrop hops. Nottingham is still as vile as ever. Soft water refuses to drop clear and makes a beer boring.
Useful data point and confirmation that I was on the right track. Terrible beer and a waste of a Saturday.
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Me too, Nottingham is my work horse for nearly all my standard ales. No trouble whatsoever in the 65-67° rangeHmmm... I love Nottingham, but for a cream ale I'd go Lutra.
That's an interesting idea! I have yet to goof around with the Kviek yeasts.Hmmm... I love Nottingham, but for a cream ale I'd go Lutra.
LOL, I hate this yeast so much!Me too, Nottingham is my work horse for nearly all my standard ales. No trouble whatsoever in the 65-67° range
You can pitch Lutra @100F and it finishes out in like 3 days. Unless I'm brewing a specialty style, I use Lutra and Voss almost exclusively.That's an interesting idea! I have yet to goof around with the Kviek yeasts.
Normally, I direct pitch WY2112 into my cream ales as a starter for my kegs of steam beer for the football season (9ers fan, steam beer is important when you're a 9ers fan).
What kind of water do you use Nottingham with? I brewed this cream ale with really soft water, and in its defense, it hasn't dropped clear so I can't beat on Nottingham too hard. Nevertheless, it still has that vile "brothy" flavor that I associate with the strain.
While looking at my glass, with disgust, I couldn't help but think, maybe it's a strain that requires harder water? There's a lot of brewers and breweries that swear by the stuff. Clearly, I'm doing something dumb.
I live in the Mid-Atalantic, my goal around this time of year is to avoid 100F.You can pitch Lutra @100F and it finishes out in like 3 days
I gotcha, just being a smartass.So do i... I'm talking right off the chiller. The sooner u pitch the less risk of contamination.
Add me to the list of folks that uses notty quite a lot. I've recently started branching out given the variety of dry yeasts out there currently.Carb check on the cream ale I kegged on Sunday. Too many moving parts on this one.
Right now, this one is pretty gnarly.
I’m normally a very systematic brewer, small adjustments yield big gains in time. I thought it would be a fun exercise after the years-long,highly disciplined, and incremental Panther Piss Project to do something a bit wild.
I intentionally did everything wrong on this beer. I ditched my proven water profile and went back to ultra-soft water. I bought into the hype that Nottingham yeast has changed and now is a super yeast that does all things at all temps. I also tried Lemondrop hops for the first time.
I like the Lemondrop hops. Nottingham is still as vile as ever. Soft water refuses to drop clear and makes a beer boring.
Useful data point and confirmation that I was on the right track. Terrible beer and a waste of a Saturday.
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I don't get it.
Was it aged on stainless?
Edit: Noting Rish's laughter remark on this post, I suddenly realized that my question could be taken the wrong way. That's not what I'm going for! I get that seven years is young for a Scotch, but I'm perplexed as to why it's so clear. Sorry, I don't know a lot about Scotch--aside from the fact that I like it a lot. I'm sorry about the dumb question, but I'm really curious to know more.
Cool glass.Hb summer ale
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