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What I did for beer today

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I cut it in half, and then lengthwise. Then, I scraped the inside with a knife on a sanitized paper towel to get it open and put it in the keg.
Did you just drop a whole bean in, put it in a bag or use extract/liquor soaked bean?
 
I decided that I like seasonal brewing, at least for now. That is, winter is time for an Anchor Steam (listened to a pod cast with the head brewer with some tips and tricks), a couple of Czech lagers, and a batch of sake (and if I'm doing a sake, I might as well pitch a sorachi ace hopped all grain batch on top of the dregs as a super starter). I have an unused bathroom that maxes out at 60F ambient these days (the temp for both Steam and sake), and a garage that will work for colder lagering.

Last night did a 4 gallon simple 8 plato Czech style 3 step mash (couple pounds each of munich and Vienna, a pound of carafoam 'cause it was handy, used up tettnanger hops), and doing a split yeast test between 34/70 Augustiner and Anchor Steam lager yeasts. Much prefer the 34/70 vs Urkel in 2 different previous tests. Doing the yeast off with 34/70 and Steam because I have a Steam coming up this week on the brew schedule.

Summer is time to play with some Kvieks in the garage. Not that there is much of a summer here in Seattle but it does get over standard ale temperatures.

I can do English ales somewhere in the house or garage pretty much year round.

I kinda look forward to the seasons, reviving yeasties from the bank. Have a file of recipe candidates I add to as the mood strikes, and then figure out what to brew at the right time of year.

One day I may get a temperature controlled freezer or gycol jacketed fermenter, but for now I enjoy having the seasons add some guidance to the brew schedule.
 
Tapped the WF lager I did 10 days ago; tasting on kegging was grassy as poopy, but carbonation seems to have taken care of it (no I don't know why) and it tastes great. Has a bit of skunkiness in the aroma, reminiscent of a green bottle beer, but it's not unpleasant. Malt came through great in the flavor, and I'm still loving Comet as my new bittering hop. Now if Santa will only bring me a new grain mill.....
 
Found out my CO2 went from 2/3 full to empty overnight. So what I will do for beer, TOMORROW, is get a new tank and check for leaks.

I carb in keg before moving to keezer and gas, so I was able to pour off 1/2 a growler of mostly carbed IPA for family today.
 
Found out my CO2 went from 2/3 full to empty overnight. So what I will do for beer, TOMORROW, is get a new tank and check for leaks.

I carb in keg before moving to keezer and gas, so I was able to pour off 1/2 a growler of mostly carbed IPA for family today.
Be careful not to pour too much that the pressure drops enough that the lid looses it's seal.

With a leak that fast it could be easy to find. Starsan works for tracking down leaks, but how easy it foams it can difficult with small leaks. You should be able to find a thread of two here on HBT with good advice on tracking down leaks. Hope you are able find your leak quickly.
 
Making an BYO American version clone of the Fuller's London Porter (uses a mix of chocolate and black malt, plus roasted barley). I'm going to use WLP017 Whitbread because I've cultured up a 2L starter so I can pitch and add to the yeast bank.

Is the first time using WLP017, if so how do you like it? I see they have available on yeastman and thinking about trying it. Just recently brewed with all of my vault purge yeasts but have not tried the beer made with WLP033 and WLP022 yet.
 
Heading down to my buddy's brewpub tonight, he wants to sell his old grain mill (three roller with stand, motor, and hopper) and we're going to take it home. After visiting and quaffing a few of his great beers. Don't know where I'd be without him, he's been my mentor, part-time boss, friend, and a**-kicker to get me to brew better beers for three years now. Gonna be a good time.
 
Is the first time using WLP017, if so how do you like it? I see they have available on yeastman and thinking about trying it. Just recently brewed with all of my vault purge yeasts but have not tried the beer made with WLP033 and WLP022 yet.
I've done two or three WLP017 so far. Eg, one of the Whitbread strain. What I've read on the interwebs is that S-04 is from the Whitbread "dry" strain. Suregork has sequenced WLP017 and WY1098 as the same or equivalent strains. There are probably other strains in the full blown Whitbread yeast.

Anyhoo, I like it. It is pretty fine like sand, while I am coming to think I prefer more flocculant yeasts with more "snow globe" action like 002 or Notty. Since it's a Fullers knock off, I should really be using Pub (which I prefer over 002 after several tests) or WLP085 (which is a mix rumored of 002 & 006 or 007). Since I was culturing up the WLP017 for my yeast bank at the same time I was brewing the Fullers clone....

Maybe we should start a vault purge thread? I got the WLP017, WLP023 and the WLP026 (and previously got a vault release of WLP037). Still playing with the 17 and 23 to see if they make it on to my eventual English ale short list. I gave up on 37 after multiple tries as it is way beyond my homebrewer abilities to make decent and repeatable beers. Haven't liked the 026 as it tastes POF to me (has the STA1 gene).
 
Heading down to my buddy's brewpub tonight, he wants to sell his old grain mill (three roller with stand, motor, and hopper) and we're going to take it home. After visiting and quaffing a few of his great beers. Don't know where I'd be without him, he's been my mentor, part-time boss, friend, and a**-kicker to get me to brew better beers for three years now. Gonna be a good time.
Can you share the brewpub name?

I rarely get out but always happy to have a recommendation in the SEattle area. My favorite is Machine House Brewery. Gotta get to Post Doc Brewing in Redmond one of these days...
 
Can you share the brewpub name?

I rarely get out but always happy to have a recommendation in the SEattle area. My favorite is Machine House Brewery. Gotta get to Post Doc Brewing in Redmond one of these days...
It's Rail Hopp'n in Auburn, on Main Street. He used to run it out of his garage but last year got some nice digs next to Oddfellas. If you go, and Billy Jack (the owner) is there, tell him Becky sent you. And try the Red Caboose IPA, it's a Mosaic Smash with raspberries that is just to die for.
 
Yesterday: Brewed a 10gal batch of beer, well actually brewed 9gals and turned it into 5gal of IPA then added a gallon of water to the other 4gals to make a pale/golden ale.

Today: Weather around here got just cold enough that it now takes forever to make RO water now so I had to finish collecting my brewing RO water for next batch today. Normally I can make enough while I am brewing. Next time I might use my IC and the RIMS to warm the incoming water to the RO system to see if that speeds up the process.


I've done two or three WLP017 so far. Eg, one of the Whitbread strain. What I've read on the interwebs is that S-04 is from the Whitbread "dry" strain. Suregork has sequenced WLP017 and WY1098 as the same or equivalent strains. There are probably other strains in the full blown Whitbread yeast.

Anyhoo, I like it. It is pretty fine like sand, while I am coming to think I prefer more flocculant yeasts with more "snow globe" action like 002 or Notty. Since it's a Fullers knock off, I should really be using Pub (which I prefer over 002 after several tests) or WLP085 (which is a mix rumored of 002 & 006 or 007). Since I was culturing up the WLP017 for my yeast bank at the same time I was brewing the Fullers clone....

Maybe we should start a vault purge thread? I got the WLP017, WLP023 and the WLP026 (and previously got a vault release of WLP037). Still playing with the 17 and 23 to see if they make it on to my eventual English ale short list. I gave up on 37 after multiple tries as it is way beyond my homebrewer abilities to make decent and repeatable beers. Haven't liked the 026 as it tastes POF to me (has the STA1 gene).
Thanks for the tip on wlp017, if it is basically the same as 1098 might try that instead so I don't need to slant it incase I like it.

I had recently reslanted wlp037 and have the yeast in the fridge. I keep going back and forth about brewing with it or not. I only brewed with it once, I was not to happy with it at first but the beer sort of grew on me over time. WLP038 is sort of similar but does not attenuate as much and after that one I am kind of getting a taste for phenolic beer again. I have some wlp515 chilling might do a batch and split between wlp515 and wlp037.

I did not get phenols from WLP026 but I got some banana which is not my favorite flavor. I seen reports of it being an over attenuator which makes me a bit nervous if it contaminates some other yeast. Without the POF clove flavor it might be hard to identify. I thought I was able to stop it from over attenuation by mashing high and crashing the beer when it was attenuated to where I wanted it, but that beer got foaming in the keg so it might of been still working. I got a slight vanilla flavor from that beer and would not mind figuring a way to get it stronger without getting more banana.

I had a pint of my wlp033 bitters and seems like it might be an OK yeast, a little fruitiness in flavor and aroma. Will try it again in a week or two.
 
Not today but late last night got on YVH and ordered two pounds of Mosaic. It's my very first favorite hop for IPA's, and it finally seems to be falling out of favor with all the new varieties out. Only $18/lb for the 2018 crop; YVH takes great pains to keep their hops fresh so last year's crop doesn't bother me a bit. Two pounds will last me a good long time. Now crossing my fingers they get here before New Years, planning a nice Smash on the 1st to celebrate 2020. That's the really nice thing about living in WA, I get my hops fast!
 
brew day tomorrow so today i've already put the yeast starter in the fridge to settle, replaced the di resin in my water system and cleaned some new tc gaskets/fittings. later on is filling the hlt, weighing/milling grain, weighing out brew salts and preheating the hlt to jump start tomorrow's brew.
 
Made a starter for an 11gal westlevern clone batch! Haha. Biggest one to date
20191227_233528.jpeg
 
Not today but late last night got on YVH and ordered two pounds of Mosaic. It's my very first favorite hop for IPA's, and it finally seems to be falling out of favor with all the new varieties out. Only $18/lb for the 2018 crop; YVH takes great pains to keep their hops fresh so last year's crop doesn't bother me a bit. Two pounds will last me a good long time. Now crossing my fingers they get here before New Years, planning a nice Smash on the 1st to celebrate 2020. That's the really nice thing about living in WA, I get my hops fast!
I'm getting ready to install an RO system but was not aware of cold water affecting the output volume.
 
I'm getting ready to install an RO system but was not aware of cold water affecting the output volume.
I don't recall where I read it but it sure does for me. I have a 50GPD system and get closer to 3gal per hour in the middle of summer, but yesterday it was less than 1gal per hour. Measured my tap water outside at 58F, guess it is in the 70s during summer.

I have a portable system that I use outside so that might be part of the issue, might work better inside.
 
Input pressure and temperature both affect output rate. Warmer feed water will run faster, but any more than lukewarm will harm the membrane (definitely keep comfortably below 100°F.) I have a portable unit I run off my utility sink, so in the winter I open the cold faucet full on and then ease up the hot faucet until I have room temperature feed. Year round that keeps it running 15-20 minutes per gallon with super low TDS.

As I understand it, not just input pressure matters, but the differential between input and output affects not only flow rate but the rejection efficiency of the membrane, so it will perform better just running the output into a bucket or jug rather than a bladder tank that provides back pressure.
 
I'm getting ready to install an RO system but was not aware of cold water affecting the output volume.
Check your water report to see if you have chloramine in your water, if so get an appropriate setup and consider a lower output unit as it will increase the contact in your carbon filters. Your flow rate thru the filters is the combination of the RO output plus 4x that in waste.

When I first bought my components my local water company did not use chloramine but they switched so I swapped out my 75GPD RO membrane for 50 and had to add another carbon filter. Even at 50GPD it is detectable at the lowest level of my home water test kit, so I add a little Camden to play it safe.
 
Ordered a new bag for my shiny new Mash & Boil. Also finally ordered an immersion chiller! No more baths!

Brewed up an extract bitter with plenty of EKG. I still like doing simple extracts once in awhile, and wanted to test out Maris otter LME.
 
very nice

I am doing an Anchor Steam clone. Been listening to podcasts with Fritz Maytag and the new head brewer. Seems like one of their tricks is a secondary fermentation with ~20% krausen. So, I'm gonna do that.

Have to take advantage of time off over the holidays combined with natural lager temperatures in various rooms in the house and garage to do some lagers. To me, Anchor Steam, which I first tried in 1979, is THE benchmark. I'm not saying it's the best beer in the world, but it sets the bar and if you want to be a player the beer should be equivalently good to Anchor Steam.

I've got to back out the brewing schedule and business travel for when I can do 4 gallons of sake this season. Stay tuned for that
 

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