Jake has challenged me to a beer-off! This is very exciting. We will be brewing the same recipe (below), an Ordinary Bitter, and see what kind of results we get. I ordered a pound of Fuggle hops from Hops Direct and sold 4 oz to Jake and Kelly (at cost, of course). So now I have 13.5 oz of Fuggle hops (they gave me a heavy lb) that need to used in some beer. Thus the English Mild, or the Brown ale on my to-do list. As I said, I'm looking forward to this brew-off, which I will probably brew this weekend, and will of course post all things brew related.
Ohiobrewtus' Ordinary Bitter
6.75 lb Marris Otter
0.50 lb Crystal Malt 60L
0.50 oz Fuggles (60 min)
1 oz East Kent Goldings (40 min)
1 oz East Kent Goldings (15 min)
1.5 oz Fuggles (5 min)
Wyeast English Special Bitter yeast (Private Collection)
Expected OG 1.041
Expected FG 1.010
IBU 35
SRM 7
Monday, December 29, 2008
IPA a go-go
I'm back to the IPA basics. Love me some hoppy brews, and it's been a while since I made one. I brewed a Dogfish Head 60 min IPA clone back in the last week of November, it's bottle aging right now. I have tried a bottle and it's just like I remember (well, I bit lighter as I missed my OG by 10 pts). It's got an amazing grapefruit aroma from the dry hops, nice smooth, light body, and a lovely crisp bite.
The Rye IPA has been fermenting for two weeks now, and I just took my first sample of it. I was very pleased with the results. It's got a very strong hop bitterness right now, but once it gets dry hopped that should balance it out pretty well.
The Rye IPA has been fermenting for two weeks now, and I just took my first sample of it. I was very pleased with the results. It's got a very strong hop bitterness right now, but once it gets dry hopped that should balance it out pretty well.
Friday, December 5, 2008
It's The Litte Things
As I mentioned earlier, brewery activity has slowed lately. I brewed up a 2 gallon batch of Dogfish Head 60 Min clone, it's dry hopping right now and will be ready to bottle in about a week (I can't wait!). That basically came about from brewing withdrawal. I put the porter on the gas to carbonate and it's coming along. I think it's too young still as it is very sweet. Served at just below room temp it's not as bad, more of the roasted flavor comes through. But being that this is a rather big beer (OG was about 1.084) it probably needs months of aging in reality.
The stout came out pretty darn great! It's actually pretty light in body, and has a good bitterness to it that compliments the roasted flavors very nicely. The oats definitely added a smoothness to it that I enjoy.
I'm looking forward to getting the amber ales on the gas so they can be drinkable in a week or so. Then this weekend it's time to (finally) brew up Denny Conn's Rye IPA. I am very excited for this as I have only heard good things. And I'm ready for nice hoppy beverage. It'll also need some aging, but that's why I have the Dogfish Head to tide me over. I think I'll also make another quick turnaround brew after that. Something similar to the Scottish Light I brewed a while back, but more along the lines of an English Mild. Something that's drinkable within a few weeks of brewing, not heavy, goes down easy. A good lunch beer. Yeah, that's what I'd like about now.
The stout came out pretty darn great! It's actually pretty light in body, and has a good bitterness to it that compliments the roasted flavors very nicely. The oats definitely added a smoothness to it that I enjoy.
I'm looking forward to getting the amber ales on the gas so they can be drinkable in a week or so. Then this weekend it's time to (finally) brew up Denny Conn's Rye IPA. I am very excited for this as I have only heard good things. And I'm ready for nice hoppy beverage. It'll also need some aging, but that's why I have the Dogfish Head to tide me over. I think I'll also make another quick turnaround brew after that. Something similar to the Scottish Light I brewed a while back, but more along the lines of an English Mild. Something that's drinkable within a few weeks of brewing, not heavy, goes down easy. A good lunch beer. Yeah, that's what I'd like about now.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Slow
Not much has been happening since Teach a Friend to Homebrew day. In fact, I've taken those few weeks in between off as there's lots of beer aging away, waiting for a keg to free itself (well, it can't do it alone, I'll help). I transfered the ten gallons of Amber Rye to secondary fermenters and added Polyclar, a clarifying agent that helps eliminate evil chill haze.
I'm also getting ready to make my first lager, now that the cold has come. But my fermenting fridge is in the garage, and it's even too cold in there! I have the thermostat in the fridge set to 50, but the temp is around 45. A bit too cold for the lager yeast I've chosen, Wyeast 2124 Bohemian Lager, which has a temp range of 48-58. So I'm thinking of moving the fridge to the basement where I can have excellent control all year round. Too bad the things heavier than a mo'fo.
Pilsner Jasuhn
8 lb German Pilsner
1 oz Select Spalt (60 min)
1 oz Saaz (30 min)
0.5 Spalt (30 min)
1 oz Saaze (flame-out)
Target OG 1.048
Target IBU 33
I'm also getting ready to make my first lager, now that the cold has come. But my fermenting fridge is in the garage, and it's even too cold in there! I have the thermostat in the fridge set to 50, but the temp is around 45. A bit too cold for the lager yeast I've chosen, Wyeast 2124 Bohemian Lager, which has a temp range of 48-58. So I'm thinking of moving the fridge to the basement where I can have excellent control all year round. Too bad the things heavier than a mo'fo.
Pilsner Jasuhn
8 lb German Pilsner
1 oz Select Spalt (60 min)
1 oz Saaz (30 min)
0.5 Spalt (30 min)
1 oz Saaze (flame-out)
Target OG 1.048
Target IBU 33
Monday, November 10, 2008
Teach a Friend to Homebrew
Saturday, November 1, was teach a friend to homebrew day. I only had one friend over who had never brewed before, and one who does partial mashes. The day had it's glitches with a mill that wouldn't crush the grain at first (turned out to be a loose screw), and a way missed OG (1.043 instead of 1.053). But we still ended up with ten gallons of beer, albeit slightly different from what we had set out to brew (Southern Sky Amber Rye). I used this batch as an opportunity to try a brew with two different styles of yeast to see how they affect the beer. Five gallons were fermented with Wyeast London Ale 1028, and the other five with a packet of Nottingham dry yeast. I took our first hydrometer samples this past weekend and was impressed with the differences. The Nottingham yeast produced a smoother, more malty product, with the hops being nice and subtle. The London Ale yeast let the hops shine through very nicely. Their flavor really popped. But it's early, and time will be the ultimate judge.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Stupid Dogs
I was supposed to brew a Summit SMaSH (single malt and single hops) this weekend, but ran into some obstacles. Saturday started off great. A friend from work got us free tickets to the Badger game against Illinois. Another friend was working the beer tent, so we got to drink for tips only. Great seats and a great game! Badgers finally won their first Big 10 conference game of the season ('bout freaking time!). Went back to the beer tent after the game, met Wendel the Miller Hight Life guy, got some free swag. Good times. My buddy and I shared a cab ride back to my place to hang out and sober up. After a couple ours I drove him home and that's when the shit hit the fan.
I got back to my place after 10-15 minutes only to find our foster dog Einstein soaking wet and bleeding in our kitchen. Dexter (our forever dog) is lying under the table, his muzzle and neck covered in blood that's clearly not his own. Both dogs are panting heavily. Without hesitation I leave Dexter behind and take Einstein to the emergency vet. I spend an hour or so there while he gets checked out. They decide they want to sedate him to get a better look at his wounds and send me home, telling me they'll call in a few hours to come pick him up.
I get home, clean Dexter off and find a few nicks and bruises on him, but nothing too bad. After a few hours I get a call from the vet. They say they'd like to keep him overnight so they can keep a better eye on him as he comes out of sedation. I pick him up the next morning, and he's got four drainage tubes put into his bigger wounds. He is messed up! I don't know who or what started the fight as both dogs have been getting along very well for three weeks now, but Dexter most definitely won.
So my Sunday was spent picking up meds and cleaning wounds instead of brewing. But there's always next weekend.
I got back to my place after 10-15 minutes only to find our foster dog Einstein soaking wet and bleeding in our kitchen. Dexter (our forever dog) is lying under the table, his muzzle and neck covered in blood that's clearly not his own. Both dogs are panting heavily. Without hesitation I leave Dexter behind and take Einstein to the emergency vet. I spend an hour or so there while he gets checked out. They decide they want to sedate him to get a better look at his wounds and send me home, telling me they'll call in a few hours to come pick him up.
I get home, clean Dexter off and find a few nicks and bruises on him, but nothing too bad. After a few hours I get a call from the vet. They say they'd like to keep him overnight so they can keep a better eye on him as he comes out of sedation. I pick him up the next morning, and he's got four drainage tubes put into his bigger wounds. He is messed up! I don't know who or what started the fight as both dogs have been getting along very well for three weeks now, but Dexter most definitely won.
So my Sunday was spent picking up meds and cleaning wounds instead of brewing. But there's always next weekend.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Even Flow
Well, nothing too even about it. I have one tap that seems to want to give off a hell of a lot more foam than the other and I don't know why.
But that's neither here nor there. Some updates have occurred. The stout I brewed a couple weeks ago had an OG of 1.057, which is just about perfect in my opinion. It took me some time to decide on which yeast to use for that brew. I had read in BYO that a London ESB Ale yeast would work very well, but then had some reservations about it's low attenuation levels (only about 69%). Well, I fermented this beer in the fridge for two weeks at 68 degrees, and was very pleased to see that it attenuated very well. FG was 1.016, for a total of 71.9% attenuation. OK, that's not a huge difference, but it's better than I expected. Since this is a stout and doesn't really need much clarity, I just went straight to the bottle with it. I indent to condition and age it two months at least. Right now it has a strong roasted flavor to it, but it's very smooth and balanced. I'm fairly certain that roastiness will mellow out in time.
We finally kicked the Scottish Light keg. That was a very popular brew, and I have every intention on making it again soon only with a little more abv this time. We're coming up to the end of the Litehaus Wheat keg as well, but I just kegged the 5 gal strawberry Litehaus batch and it's hooked up to the gas right now at 13 psi (hoping for about 2.3 vols). Soon I will have another keg to fill and that will be the Holiday Ale, which I'm looking forward to finally trying.
There's so much beer I want to make and so little time, and too few taps.
But that's neither here nor there. Some updates have occurred. The stout I brewed a couple weeks ago had an OG of 1.057, which is just about perfect in my opinion. It took me some time to decide on which yeast to use for that brew. I had read in BYO that a London ESB Ale yeast would work very well, but then had some reservations about it's low attenuation levels (only about 69%). Well, I fermented this beer in the fridge for two weeks at 68 degrees, and was very pleased to see that it attenuated very well. FG was 1.016, for a total of 71.9% attenuation. OK, that's not a huge difference, but it's better than I expected. Since this is a stout and doesn't really need much clarity, I just went straight to the bottle with it. I indent to condition and age it two months at least. Right now it has a strong roasted flavor to it, but it's very smooth and balanced. I'm fairly certain that roastiness will mellow out in time.
We finally kicked the Scottish Light keg. That was a very popular brew, and I have every intention on making it again soon only with a little more abv this time. We're coming up to the end of the Litehaus Wheat keg as well, but I just kegged the 5 gal strawberry Litehaus batch and it's hooked up to the gas right now at 13 psi (hoping for about 2.3 vols). Soon I will have another keg to fill and that will be the Holiday Ale, which I'm looking forward to finally trying.
There's so much beer I want to make and so little time, and too few taps.
Monday, October 13, 2008
Wedding Weekend
This past weekend was my first trip in to Michigan, 25 miles outside of Detroit in a city called Plymouth. Not much to see, just a small, nice suburban city. We were there for my wife's brother's wedding. And I've got to say, for a Wisconsin boy, yeesh, the beer selection was sub par. I know that sounds cruel, but there were two options: Miller Light (which I can completely tolerate), and Leinenkugel Sunset Wheat (yech!). Now I really, really do not enjoy even one sip of Leinies Sunset Wheat. I find it too syrupy, and very sweet. It really just isn't to my taste at all. So, with my options being two mea beers, I stuck to booze. Good old gin-toniks with a twist of lime. Those went down nice and easy.
Due to the long weekend, and my being tired from driving 7.5 hours each way, brewing was out of the question. So, once again a brew will be put on hold. Although I should certainly get to that porter this week as I have a 2.5 qt starter sitting in my fermenting fridge.
Due to the long weekend, and my being tired from driving 7.5 hours each way, brewing was out of the question. So, once again a brew will be put on hold. Although I should certainly get to that porter this week as I have a 2.5 qt starter sitting in my fermenting fridge.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Finally, a Stout
I haven't made a stout since March of this year. Not because I don't love stouts, it's just that I'm constantly trying different and new brews. But today is the day, and I'm making an oatmeal stout that I, for no good reason, have been putting off for weeks. I made my starter two nights ago, 3 quarts worth, and I just started mashing my grains 20 min ago. I overshot my mash temp by 6 degrees (was going for 152), so I'm letting it cool down a bit. My inventory was off (no idea how), because I thought I had 3 oz of East Kent Golding whole hops, but I only have two. So I'll be subbing the missing ounce with Fuggles.
I'm 20 min into my boil, missed my pre-boil SG by 6 points, which is not that bad. The original recipe called for an OG of 1.055, I was looking at hitting 1.059, now it should come to about 1.056. Pretty good in my opinion.
My neighbors, en elderly couple, have seen me brewing in the garage a number of times. Today the wife (I forgot her name) came to ask what I was doing. So I told her, and she seemed fascinated. She told me about a son of a friend of hers who also brews, living in Minneapolis, who has won a few awards. I'll definitely have to bring them over a few brews.
I'm 20 min into my boil, missed my pre-boil SG by 6 points, which is not that bad. The original recipe called for an OG of 1.055, I was looking at hitting 1.059, now it should come to about 1.056. Pretty good in my opinion.
My neighbors, en elderly couple, have seen me brewing in the garage a number of times. Today the wife (I forgot her name) came to ask what I was doing. So I told her, and she seemed fascinated. She told me about a son of a friend of hers who also brews, living in Minneapolis, who has won a few awards. I'll definitely have to bring them over a few brews.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Something Aint Right
Three weeks ago I decided to make a yeast starter from one of Rogue's famous beers. They use a special strain of yeast known as Pacman yeast which is supposed to be very clean, and have a very high attenuation (80%-85%). Unfortunately due to scheduling conflicts I was unable to brew and had to put the starter aside. So I let it sit in the fridge for a few weeks, giving the yeast a nice rest. Today was the day to have at it and use the Pacman on the oatmeal stout I was to make. But when I opened the starter to take a whiff... phew! It smelled like sour milk. Definitely not something I want to put in my beer. So, I'll be putting off the stout once more and taking another go at building a starter from harvested yeast.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
A Flavourful Note
Both the Scottish Light and the Centennial Blonde are now available on tap. The blonde came out great! This was my second attempt at the recipe, and last time I had added a dry hop addition for some aroma. I decided to go without them this time and am not disappointed. It's extremely smooth, slightly sweet, slight hop bitterness, and very, very drinkable.
The Scottish Light (see below for recipe) is just that... light! I missed my FG by only 4 points (was shooting for 1.011 and hit 1.015), but with a starting gravity of only 1.035, those four points make a huge difference. I lost 1% abv, from 3.5% to 2.5%. It's very thin, which you would expect from a light beer, but it does have good (albeit subtle) malty flavor. While it is enjoyable, it is not what I'm looking for in a beer. I want more body (which I may have lost in part due to poor mash temperature stabilization), and more pronounced flavor. So next up... Oatmeal Stout!
The Scottish Light (see below for recipe) is just that... light! I missed my FG by only 4 points (was shooting for 1.011 and hit 1.015), but with a starting gravity of only 1.035, those four points make a huge difference. I lost 1% abv, from 3.5% to 2.5%. It's very thin, which you would expect from a light beer, but it does have good (albeit subtle) malty flavor. While it is enjoyable, it is not what I'm looking for in a beer. I want more body (which I may have lost in part due to poor mash temperature stabilization), and more pronounced flavor. So next up... Oatmeal Stout!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
New Toy!
Whoo! I got me a gorgeous new toy. A Blichmann BoilerMaker. 20 gallons worth of brewing glory. And of course with said new toy comes a new batch of beer. My first 10 gallon batch! An American Wheat. One of the things I'm looking forward to in being able to brew up ten gallon batches is being able to take one brew and try two different yeasts with it. Since I will be splitting the batch into two 5 gallon carboys, I have some room to experiment. However, since I wasn't sure what I was making until the last minute I didn't really have time to make a yeast stater. So I just used the same yeast (a dry Safale US-05, similar to Wyeast's 1056) for both.
While there was no room to experiment with yeasts, I will be making one of these batches into a strawberry wheat! Which is new and exciting for me. I think strawberries will go very will with this brew. And I'm fermenting at high temps to extract some fruity esters from the yeast.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
A Week Off
My mom and niece are coming in to town this weekend, so no new brew. Which fits perfectly into my new schedule: Three weekends on, one off. Also, I'm going to try to keep things interested by alternating dark and light beers each brew. Or hoppy and malty as the case may be. So I've got a blonde that's ready to go (light) and the Scottish light which will be ready in 2-3 weeks (dark). You can keep track of what's going on in the Barefoot Brewery with the lists off to the right. I have a lot of great sounding beers on my "to do" list, which is very exciting. It's only been 15 months of brewing and I've only repeated two beers. I love the excitement of looking at a recipe and thinking, "Mmm! I can't wait to make you! You're gonna taste so good."
Sunday, September 7, 2008
Could Have Been Worse
Well, that wasn't exactly an ideal brew day, but at least I learned some things about my system from it. I hit 1.036 and 5.85 gallons going into the boil, which was 3 points high and 0.15 gallons short. Which isn't that bad. But with a 90 min boil I ended up with about 4 gallons at 1.046! That's 13 points above my targeted OG. So time to do some more work. Boil up a gallon and a half of water to dilute the wort. Cooled it down (but not enough) and mixed into the wort. I have the wort sitting in the fermenting fridge to bring the temp down to around 64 before pitching the yeast.
So brew day went a bit long, after not accounting for the 90 min boil (whoops). But no biggie. I'm really excited for this beer, it looks really nice.
So brew day went a bit long, after not accounting for the 90 min boil (whoops). But no biggie. I'm really excited for this beer, it looks really nice.
Scottish Light
It's another brew day. And it looks like it's going to be a beauty! Mostly sunny and a high of 70. Nice.
Today I'm brewing up a Scottish Light ale (BJCP style 9A). I had originally scheduled today for my first porter, but decided I really didn't want to make something heavy that would limit you to one or two pints a sitting. Also, I wanted something that wouldn't have to age for long, something I can drink within 2-3 weeks of brewing. I have yet to make an all grain Scottish ale, so this seemed perfect. I had also just happened upon this month's BYO which has an entire section dedicated to Scottish beers.
When most people think of a Scottish ale they think of a Scotch ale. A beer that's typically heavy, malty, and high in alcohol. Well, that doesn't have to be the case. The Scottish Light, or 60/- (shilling) is defined as "cleanly malty with a dry finish" and is balanced more towards malt than hops in profile (which is common for all Scottish ales). You're looking for only 2.5%-3.2% ABV in this beer, which is very light and easy to drink. Should be perfect for the start of fall.
Robbie Burn's 60/-
(BYO September, 2008)
Target OG 1.033
Target FG 1.011
Target IBU 15.5
SRM 14.5
2.25 lb Munich Malt
1.75 lb Marris Otter
1.75 lb Vienna Malt
0.50 lb Crystal Malt 40L
0.25 lb Chocolate Malt
0.75 oz East Kent Goldings (90 min) (original recipe called for Fuggles, which I could not find)
1 pkg of Wyeast 1728 Scottish Ale - no starter
Scottish ales should be mashed med-high (154-158) to reduce the amount of fermentable sugars. My brewing software tells me my FG will be 1.009, so I will aim for a higher mash temp (157) and hopefully get it to 1.011.
The original recipe called for 0.25 lb more of the Munich, MO, and Vienna malts. But with my efficiency being what it is, I had to reduce those numbers to hit the target OG.
Today I'm brewing up a Scottish Light ale (BJCP style 9A). I had originally scheduled today for my first porter, but decided I really didn't want to make something heavy that would limit you to one or two pints a sitting. Also, I wanted something that wouldn't have to age for long, something I can drink within 2-3 weeks of brewing. I have yet to make an all grain Scottish ale, so this seemed perfect. I had also just happened upon this month's BYO which has an entire section dedicated to Scottish beers.
When most people think of a Scottish ale they think of a Scotch ale. A beer that's typically heavy, malty, and high in alcohol. Well, that doesn't have to be the case. The Scottish Light, or 60/- (shilling) is defined as "cleanly malty with a dry finish" and is balanced more towards malt than hops in profile (which is common for all Scottish ales). You're looking for only 2.5%-3.2% ABV in this beer, which is very light and easy to drink. Should be perfect for the start of fall.
Robbie Burn's 60/-
(BYO September, 2008)
Target OG 1.033
Target FG 1.011
Target IBU 15.5
SRM 14.5
2.25 lb Munich Malt
1.75 lb Marris Otter
1.75 lb Vienna Malt
0.50 lb Crystal Malt 40L
0.25 lb Chocolate Malt
0.75 oz East Kent Goldings (90 min) (original recipe called for Fuggles, which I could not find)
1 pkg of Wyeast 1728 Scottish Ale - no starter
Scottish ales should be mashed med-high (154-158) to reduce the amount of fermentable sugars. My brewing software tells me my FG will be 1.009, so I will aim for a higher mash temp (157) and hopefully get it to 1.011.
The original recipe called for 0.25 lb more of the Munich, MO, and Vienna malts. But with my efficiency being what it is, I had to reduce those numbers to hit the target OG.
A Brew Start
Welcome to the Barefoot Brewery blog. First things first, I need a slogan. Something that's inviting and warm and makes you want a brew.
A little history: I've been homebrewing for 13 months and have 22 brews under the belt. I'm constantly looking to make something new and interesting and expand my pallet as often as possible. I'm a proud member of the Madison Homebrewers and Taster Guild, and a frequent visitor and contributor to Homebrew Talk.com.
My setup is simple. I have a 48 quart mash lauter-tun, two 6.5 gallon carboys, two 5 gallon carboys, a 32 quart kettle, a 14 quart kettle, immersion wort chiller, and fermenting fridge. I hope to soon be the proud owner of a Blichmann BoilerMaker Brew Pot (/drool).
I hope this blog will encourage other to brew and make them realize that there's really nothing to it!
Cheers!
A little history: I've been homebrewing for 13 months and have 22 brews under the belt. I'm constantly looking to make something new and interesting and expand my pallet as often as possible. I'm a proud member of the Madison Homebrewers and Taster Guild, and a frequent visitor and contributor to Homebrew Talk.com.
My setup is simple. I have a 48 quart mash lauter-tun, two 6.5 gallon carboys, two 5 gallon carboys, a 32 quart kettle, a 14 quart kettle, immersion wort chiller, and fermenting fridge. I hope to soon be the proud owner of a Blichmann BoilerMaker Brew Pot (/drool).
I hope this blog will encourage other to brew and make them realize that there's really nothing to it!
Cheers!
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