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I checked the carbonation on my blueberry sour ale. I am really digging this. I might make more sours now!
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How'd you do the Blueberries?
Since they are in season I went by the local farm and picked some. I used 2 pounds and added water until slightly covered and boiled for 10 minutes then mashed them and let cool to room temp. I added them to the primary fermentation after 5 days and let the beer set for about 15 days in primary.
 
Since they are in season I went by the local farm and picked some. I used 2 pounds and added water until slightly covered and boiled for 10 minutes then mashed them and let cool to room temp. I added them to the primary fermentation after 5 days and let the beer set for about 15 days in primary.
What was your batch size? About ready to add blueberries to my sour. Just curious. Mine will be about 6gal.
 
Tasted the Bell's Two Hearted clone that got dry hopped last weekend...and sad to say I am not impressed. Aroma is very floral, so is flavor, but also a bit too bitter and even a bit too harsh for my hop-loving palate. I do love me some Centennial hops, but this one better improve with carbonation or it's getting relegated to the back of the kegerator. Kegging is planned for this weekend to free up a carboy for a commission batch for a friend. Before anyone asks, yes the hops were fresh, and clone recipe (from Brewers Friend) was followed to the T.
 
Tasted the Bell's Two Hearted clone that got dry hopped last weekend...and sad to say I am not impressed. Aroma is very floral, so is flavor, but also a bit too bitter and even a bit too harsh for my hop-loving palate. I do love me some Centennial hops, but this one better improve with carbonation or it's getting relegated to the back of the kegerator. Kegging is planned for this weekend to free up a carboy for a commission batch for a friend. Before anyone asks, yes the hops were fresh, and clone recipe (from Brewers Friend) was followed to the T.
What's your chilling process. As far as I remembered most two hearted clones use alot of late addition hops and if your not chilling immediately or adjusting for that you can end up with MUCH higher bitterness then expected. Cheers
 
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What's your chilling process. As far as I remembered most two hearted clones use alot of late addition hops and if your not chilling immediately or adjusting for that you can end up with MUCH higher bitterness then expected. Cheers

I use a plate chiller and get down to at least 65 before pitching, and also have a ferment fridge with a temp controller. Hoping carbonation helps it along.
 
Kegged a Czech Pils (closed xfer) and harvested the Urkel yeast (swirled remaining beer and drained into sanitized quart jars). Then cleaned the fermenter.
 
Kegged my new version of “House Ale” - sample was pretty good! And mashed a 3G batch of Berliner which is sitting on the heat pad as I type.
 
I use a plate chiller and get down to at least 65 before pitching, and also have a ferment fridge with a temp controller. Hoping carbonation helps it along.
Its specifically the amount of time it takes you to get from flameout to 170ish or below that makes the big difference. if your 60 min timer goes off and you turn of the flame and say for example go make dinner to allow things to settle out and you come back a hour later all your late flavor hops are now just more bittering hops which can cause 0/5/10 min additions to be 10/15/20 or even 30/35/40 depending how long the delay was. It can most definitely make your beers all come out considerably more bitter and it gets worst the more late additions you have. Most software defaults to **immediately*" chilling your wort. I think alot of brewers completely overlook this. if chilling immediately is not a option for your process/setup you can adjust your software to compensate (at least in bs3)
 
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Its specifically the amount of time it takes you to get from flameout to 170ish or below that makes the big difference. if your 60 min timer goes off and you turn of the flame and say for example go make dinner to allow things to settle out and you come back a hour later all your late flavor hops are now just more bittering hops which can cause 0/5/10 min additions to be 10/15/20 or even 30/35/40 depending how long the delay was. It can most definitely make your beers all come out considerably more bitter and it gets worst the more late additions you have. Most software defaults to **immediately*" chilling your wort. I think alot of brewers completely overlook this. if chilling immediately is not a option for your process/setup you can adjust your software to compensate (at least in bs3)

Nope, that's not it either. As soon as the flame is out, if I'm not doing a whirlpool, the chiller gets started up; I set it up about 30 minutes to end of boil. Even if I do a hopstand/whirlpool, there's only 10 minutes of that before the hose gets turned on. With our ground water, chilling is done in about 10 minutes.
 
Got a yeast starter going yesterday for brewing tomorrow. It's a bit old, so giving it more time than usual to propagate. Later I'll grind grains and get the rest of the stuff ready for brewing tomorrow. Weather looks like it will cooperate :)
 
Finally entered my 1st contest ever and got 3rd place in the International lager category for my Czech style black lager!View attachment 623137
Congrats man! Care to get onvolved in the Fellowship of the Home Brew trade thread? We'd love to try your medal winner!
 
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