I made a beer with Reeses Puffs cereal. It was for an Iron Brewer competition.
i've always liked the idea of brewing beer specifically as a cooking ingredient. soup base, marinade, etc.One of our family's favorite soups is a Buckwheat Soba with tomatoes and chilis. So I thought, why not? Made a saison with soy sauce, sambal chili, lemon zest and juice (to mimic the tomato and cilantro), and buckwheat flour because we couldn't find groats. I didn't find it tart enough, so I also added our house sour culture (made from grapes/wild yeast that we grow ourselves).
#1-Don't use flour. Oh damn, don't use flour. That was the messiest mash experience I have ever had and the beer is still cloudy after a year and a half of aging/lagering.
#2-Other than the chili completely disappearing into the other flavors, it tastes like the soup. The Soy Sauce umami flavor is too strong for me, but this beer could be an excellent sour ramen base without any other additions.
SWMBO loves it and that is all that matters.
As the doughnuts were stale, you could have named the beer "Aged doughnuts belgian pale ale" hahahahaStale Krispy Kreme doughnuts. Made a Belgian Pale Ale. And then I wrote about it. March April 2020 Zymurgy
I 'Dry Hopped" 2 1/2 gallons of Fat Tire clone with 2oz of High THC Marijuana Buds. Turned out nice, but would probably have been better off smoking the buds and drinking the beer seperately![]()
nah, i figured since thc is soluble in alcohol it would just workDid youget any THC content in the beer? Don't you need to decarboxylate the weed to release the THC content? Dry hopping wouldn't have the needed heat?
I got a big bag of self-made dried sourdough bread rests that I collected over time. Mainly rye and spelt mix bread. I was collecting it to make a dessert called "großer Hans", a northern German desert which is made out of old bread and which is reaaaaaaally good (although it doesn't sound too appealing, I must admit). But I actually now got too much of it and I wonder how a beer would taste of I include it in the mash.....I made a stout and mashed with half a loaf of dark rye pumpernickel bread. It was pretty good.
Local brewery Duclaw makes a sour beer called Unicorn Farts that's made with Fruity Pebbles, and Edible GlitterI've thought about adding some cereal (Fruity Pebbles or Trix maybe) to the mash of a pale ale or ipa. Haven't tried it yet, maybe some day. Back home in upstate NY there's a small brewery that every fall brews a pumpkin beer where they dump several baked pumpkin pies directly into the mash.
I got a big bag of self-made dried sourdough bread rests that I collected over time. Mainly rye and spelt mix bread. I was collecting it to make a dessert called "großer Hans", a northern German desert which is made out of old bread and which is reaaaaaaally good (although it doesn't sound too appealing, I must admit). But I actually now got too much of it and I wonder how a beer would taste of I include it in the mash.....
i usually use corn meal, as that's what i have lyin around in the kitchen. popcorn also works just fine, as long as it's not drowning in butter flavored oil...I often add cracked corn to brews to either up the IBU or lighten the body. I get it straight from the feed bucket. Scratch grain also has made it into a few of my beers. It's likely the cheapest ingredient you will ever use. Chicken feed isn't just for chickens anymore!![]()
How does it taste?Local brewery Duclaw makes a sour beer called Unicorn Farts that's made with Fruity Pebbles, and Edible Glitter